Famed investor Jim Cramer has delivered a blistering critique of GameStop’s (NYSE: GME) aggressive overtures toward eBay.

While meme-stock enthusiasts celebrated the audacity of the proposal, the former hedge fund manager questioned the underlying motives, comparing the maneuver to high-stakes corporate raiding tactics from the 1980s.

With eBay’s shares trending upward, Cramer warned that the “insult dog” narrative being pushed by GameStop’s leadership might be a distraction from the fundamental fiscal realities of a smaller company attempting to swallow a legacy e-commerce titan.

On Monday, the CNBC veteran dismissed the proposal as a “belligerent” throwback to a bygone era of corporate raiding.

Drawing parallels to historic hostile takeovers, he argued that the move feels less like a strategic merger and more like a calculated attempt to rattle a much larger competitor – and the market seems to agree.

GameStop stock is down nearly 7% at the time of writing, while eBay shares are pushing meaningfully higher.

GameStop’s proposal for eBay dubbed a ‘Greenmail’ ghost

Cramer’s most provocative observation was the historical symmetry between Ryan Cohen’s current tactics and the 1984 campaign led by the late T. Boone Pickens.

In that era, Pickens’ Mesa Petroleum famously launched a bid for the significantly larger Phillips Petroleum, a move that became a textbook example of corporate “greenmailing.”

On a recent segment of CNBC, the Mad Money host suggested the bid might be intended to force a lucrative buyout rather than a genuine acquisition.

By bringing up this comparison, he cast doubt on the sincerity of the offer, questioning if the ultimate goal is merely to “bring out the possibility of a reverse” where a larger entity pays a premium just to maintain its independence.

Why there isn’t much substance in GME’s proposal for eBay

A central pillar of the GameStop narrative is that eBay is a failing entity in need of a radical overhaul, a claim Cramer vehemently contested.

He took sharp aim at the “coloration of the idea that eBay has done a poor job,” noting that the company has actually undergone a “fabulous” turnaround.

The CNBC veteran pointed to the positive outlook held by experts like Josh Brown, asserting that eBay is “better than it used to be”, even though the stock’s recent movement is partially fueled by Cohen’s quiet accumulation of shares.

For him, Cohen’s public criticisms – complaining that eBay management “gets paid too much” while the company is “really bad” – amount to an “insult dog story” that wears thin when contrasted with eBay’s actual operational improvements.

The audacity of the ‘David and Goliath’ takeover

Finally, the sheer scale of the proposal remains a point of intense skepticism.

Cramer highlighted the absurdity of the size mismatch, reminding viewers that “Phillips was actually much, much bigger than Mesa,” much like eBay dwarfs GameStop today.

He questioned the logic of a smaller retail-focused firm disparaging a tech giant that has spent years refining its marketplace model.

The famed investor was particularly struck by the “belligerent” tone of the delivery – suggesting that going on TV to insult a target company is a tactic that “wears thin very quickly.”

From Cramer’s perspective, the substance of the news is less about retail innovation and more about an aggressive power play that ignores the “fabulous job” eBay has done to stabilize its own ship.

As the dust settles on today’s trading session, the market is left to decide whether Cohen is a modern-day visionary or, as Cramer implies, a corporate actor using an old script to create modern volatility.

While the documents might tell one story, the “belligerence” on display suggests a high-stakes game of chicken that is only just beginning.

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