<p>Video game retailer GameStop Corp tumbled 8 per cent in early trading on Thursday as the company's silence on its turnaround plan left its army of small-time investors questioning the meteoric rise in its share price this year.</p>.<p>Although the company posted a 25 per cent jump in quarterly profit late on Wednesday, executives failed to lay out fresh details about how it will refashion itself into a gaming and entertainment retailer.</p>.<p>Shares fell 7.6 per cent to $183.70 in premarket, still far below the $482.95 that some investors paid in January, but well above the $18 they traded at in December.</p>.<p>Thursday's drop was also subdued compared with the 30 per cent move in its shares after each of its previous two earnings reports.</p>.<p>"When this meme trade ends (if ever) this will likely be a steep, ugly fall," Jake Dollarhide, chief executive officer at Longbow Asset Management, said in a LinkedIn post.</p>.<p>"Revenues are now half of what they were in 2018 when this was a profitable $14 stock before gaming went totally to the cloud."</p>.<p>The company earlier this year was at the center of a battle between small-time traders and Wall Street hedge funds who had bet that shares would fall. It has since raised more than $1 billion in new equity, partly to fuel its reorganization plans.</p>.<p>Investors had been looking for more details on efforts by chairman and top shareholder Ryan Cohen to focus on e-commerce, while also trying to rejuvenate the physical stores after a year of pandemic-related closures.</p>.<p>Net sales in the second quarter jumped to $1.18 billion, but the company also posted a bigger-than-expected adjusted loss of 76 cents per share.</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos:</strong></p>
<p>Video game retailer GameStop Corp tumbled 8 per cent in early trading on Thursday as the company's silence on its turnaround plan left its army of small-time investors questioning the meteoric rise in its share price this year.</p>.<p>Although the company posted a 25 per cent jump in quarterly profit late on Wednesday, executives failed to lay out fresh details about how it will refashion itself into a gaming and entertainment retailer.</p>.<p>Shares fell 7.6 per cent to $183.70 in premarket, still far below the $482.95 that some investors paid in January, but well above the $18 they traded at in December.</p>.<p>Thursday's drop was also subdued compared with the 30 per cent move in its shares after each of its previous two earnings reports.</p>.<p>"When this meme trade ends (if ever) this will likely be a steep, ugly fall," Jake Dollarhide, chief executive officer at Longbow Asset Management, said in a LinkedIn post.</p>.<p>"Revenues are now half of what they were in 2018 when this was a profitable $14 stock before gaming went totally to the cloud."</p>.<p>The company earlier this year was at the center of a battle between small-time traders and Wall Street hedge funds who had bet that shares would fall. It has since raised more than $1 billion in new equity, partly to fuel its reorganization plans.</p>.<p>Investors had been looking for more details on efforts by chairman and top shareholder Ryan Cohen to focus on e-commerce, while also trying to rejuvenate the physical stores after a year of pandemic-related closures.</p>.<p>Net sales in the second quarter jumped to $1.18 billion, but the company also posted a bigger-than-expected adjusted loss of 76 cents per share.</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos:</strong></p>