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Meme-Stock Darling GameStop Is -25% YTD. What Its Chart Shows Ahead of Earnings

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Meta Moo wrote a column · Dec 4, 2025 10:46
One-time meme-stock darling $GameStop (GME.US)$ has fallen more than 25% year to date and trails the $S&P 500 Index (.SPX.US)$ in almost every time period from one month to five years. What does GME's chart and fundamental analysis say as the video-game/collectibles retailer prepares to report earnings next week?
Let's take a look:
GameStop's Fundamental Analysis
GME will go to the tape with the firm's fiscal Q3 results after the close of business next Tuesday.
The company isn't well covered by analysts, but the one estimate that I can find calls for $0.20 in adjusted earnings per share on roughly $987.3 million of revenue.
Numbers like that would compare very well to the same period a year ago, with adjusted EPS up 233.3% from the $0.06 that GME reported in fiscal Q3 2024 and revenues some 15% higher from the year-ago quarter's $860.3 million.
The firm is also coming off a strong fiscal Q2, where it easily beat expectations for both earnings and revenue.
GameStop's Technical Analysis
Now let's take a look at GME's chart going back some seven months and running through Tuesday afternoon:
Meme-Stock Darling GameStop Is -25% YTD. What Its Chart Shows Ahead of Earnings
What we have here is a falling-wedge pattern of bullish reversal, as marked with the two blue, heavy diagonal lines that take up almost the entire chart.
Now, this matters, as an ascending triangle – marked above with thinner blue lines, and which this chart comes close to actually showing – would be a pattern of bearish continuance.
GameStop rebounded off of the falling wedge's lower trendline in late November and is currently trying to retake its 50-day Simple Moving Average (or "SMA," marked with a curvy blue line in the tan-shaded area's center). Doing that could get some professional money behind the stock.
That's key, as the shares have recently taken and held their 21-day Exponential Moving Average (or "EMA," denoted by the curvy green line above). Taking and holding the 21-day EMA implies some support from the swing crowd.
One could see the 50-day SMA as GameStop's current upside pivot, but my feeling is that the 200-day SMA (the red line above) will matter much, much more.
Yes, the 200-day line is usually seen as more important than the 50-day one – but in this case, that red line is running almost concurrently with the falling wedge's upper trendline.
Meanwhile, GME's other technical indicators are showing signs of improvement as well.
For instance, readers will see that the stock's Relative Strength Index (or "RSI," marked with a gray line at the chart's top) has quickly gone from technically oversold to neutral to much better than neutral in less than two weeks.
And look at GME's Moving Average Convergence Divergence indicator, marked with black and gold lines and blue bars at the chart's bottom.
The 12-day EMA (the black line) and 26-day EMA (the gold line) are both running below the zero-bound, but the 12-day line has crossed over the 26-day one. That's a subtle technical positive.
More overtly, the histogram of the 9-day EMA the (blue bars) has already moved above zero, which is a short-term bullish technical signal.
An Options Option
Some options investors looking to take advantage of this moderately bullish set-up while not using much capital might set a three-part options trade, called a "combination" in this situation.
This would involve selling a lower put, buying a call and selling a higher call – with all three expiring on the same day but having different strike prices. Here's an example:
-- Purchase one GME call at a $24.50 strike price -- the falling wedge's upper trendline -- and a Dec. 12 expiration (i.e., after Tuesday's earnings). This would cost about $0.70 at recent prices.
-- Sell one GME Dec. 12 $27 call for roughly $0.32 at recent levels.
-- Sell one GME Dec. 12 $20 put, which was trading at about $0.22 as I wrote this.
Net Debit: $0.16.
In this case, the trader wants to get long the shares, but only if GME breaks out of the falling-wedge pattern.
To do so inexpensively, the trader buys a call with a strike price equal to the pattern's upper trendline. But to reduce costs, the trader also sells a put with the $27 strike, turning this portion of the set-up into a simple bull-call spread.
Additionally, the trader sells a put with a strike price that's at the falling wedge's lower trendline to further lower costs (because he or she is OK with actually buying the shares at a discount if this put is exercised).
Best case, the trader's theoretical maximum gain is $2.50 on a set up that only cost $0.16 -- a $2.34 net profit.
Worst case, the trader ends up long 100 GME shares at a $20.16 net basis at a time when the shares are trading below $20.
(Moomoo Technologies Inc. Markets Commentator Stephen "Sarge" Guilfoyle had no position in GME at the time of writing this column.)
This article discusses technical analysis, other approaches, including fundamental analysis, may offer very different views. The examples provided are for illustrative purposes only and are not intended to be reflective of the results you can expect to achieve. Specific security charts used are for illustrative purposes only and are not a recommendation, offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy any security. Past investment performance does not indicate or guarantee future success. Returns will vary, and all investments carry risks, including loss of principal. This content is also not a research report and is not intended to serve as the basis for any investment decision. The information contained in this article does not purport to be a complete description of the securities, markets, or developments referred to in this material. Moomoo and its affiliates make no representation or warranty as to the article's adequacy, completeness, accuracy or timeliness for any particular purpose of the above content. Furthermore, there is no guarantee that any statements, estimates, price targets, opinions or forecasts provided herein will prove to be correct.
Options trading is risky and not appropriate for everyone. Read the Options Disclosure Document (https://j.moomoo.com/017y9J) before trading. Options are complex and you may quickly lose the entire investment. Supporting docs for any claims will be furnished upon request.
Options trading subject to eligibility requirements. Strategies available will depend on options level approved.
Maximum potential loss and profit for options are calculated based on the single leg or an entire multi-leg trade remaining intact until expiration with no option contracts being exercised or assigned. These figures do not account for a portion of a multi-leg strategy being changed or removed or the trader assuming a short or long position in the underlying stock at or before expiration. Therefore, it is possible to lose more than the theoretical max loss of a strategy.
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