Take-Two Interactive enters a week that could reshape its narrative for the next two years. A leaked Best Buy affiliate email, earnings due after the close, and a scheduled appearance by CEO Strauss Zelnick all converge within days. The stock has already responded: it gained 11.43% in euros over the past seven sessions, closing Friday at €208.60. Yet for all the momentum, the shares remain 2.84% lower year-to-date, a reminder that the GTA VI hype cycle still has room to run.
The pre-order leak is the catalyst that caught the market’s attention. A campaign email sent to Best Buy’s affiliate partners described a physical pre-order window for Grand Theft Auto VI from 18 to 21 May. Affiliates would earn a 5% commission on sales generated through their links. Neither Rockstar nor Take-Two has confirmed the timing, but the speculation alone has pulled the stock above its 50-day moving average of €181.01. The relative strength index sits at 53.3, suggesting expectations are elevated but not yet euphoric.
Pricing Power Under the Microscope
Bank of America has thrown a new variable into the mix: the possibility that GTA VI could launch at $80, a significant step above the standard $70 premium price tag. If confirmed, it would signal Take-Two’s confidence in its pricing leverage and could normalise higher price points across the industry. TD Cowen analyst Doug Creutz projects more than 40 million units sold in the first year, with the live-service component of GTA VI generating roughly $3 billion in net bookings by fiscal 2028 — a stark contrast to the $500 million GTA Online currently contributes annually.
That pricing debate adds weight to the earnings release scheduled for 21 May. Wall Street’s estimates for the fiscal fourth quarter range from $0.56 to $0.58 per share on revenue of about $1.55 billion. For the full year, management expects net bookings between $6.65 billion and $6.70 billion, an increase of roughly 18% from the prior year. The real focus, however, will be on the initial guidance for fiscal 2027. If net bookings come in above $9 billion, it would validate the record-cycle thesis; below $8.5 billion could rattle the more optimistic models.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Take-Two?
Analysts Bet Big on the Pipeline
The bullish case is well represented. UBS has named Take-Two its top pick in the US gaming sector, arguing that concerns about AI disruption and competition for user time are overblown. The bank sees roughly 80% upside in its own valuation model, while the market’s implied CFROI of around 9% sits well below the historical median of 13%. The median analyst price target stands at $280, with a high of $320 — Bank of America lifted its target to that level from $305 just recently.
Management is expected to unveil a multi-year pipeline during the earnings call. That would give investors more context for the period following the GTA VI launch, particularly around how Take-Two plans to sustain revenue beyond the initial release. The company has been streamlining its portfolio: the indie label Private Division is being wound down, while focus sharpens on the biggest franchises.
A Counterweight from Soros
Not everyone is doubling down. Soros Fund Management exited its Take-Two position in the first quarter, selling its entire stake. While the move does not necessarily signal a vote of no confidence in GTA VI, it shows that some institutional investors are taking profits after the recent rally. The stock now sits only 7.41% below its 52-week high.
The calendar ahead remains the dominant catalyst. A potential pre-order confirmation on 18 May, the earnings print on 21 May, and Zelnick’s appearance at the TD Cowen Technology, Media & Telecom Conference on 27 May create three consecutive checkpoints. The risk of a further delay — Rockstar already pushed the release from early to November 2026 just before a prior earnings call — hangs over every projection. Take-Two needs not only a strong launch but a monetisation strategy that runs for years. The next few days will show whether the market’s patience is priced correctly.
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