eBay Inc. (NASDAQ: EBAY)
Company Overview
eBay is one of the internet’s original marketplaces — and for most of the past five years, it has been treated like one. The company that pioneered online auctions spent much of 2021 through 2024 losing ground to Amazon, Shopify, and a generation of vertical marketplaces while its GMV stagnated and growth investors moved on. That narrative is now encountering a very different set of numbers.
In Q1 2026, eBay reported revenue growth of 19% year-over-year with GMV growth of 18%, and first-party advertising revenue grew 33%, adding a high-margin lever to the marketplace model. The company returned $639 million to shareholders in Q1 through buybacks and dividends, including $500 million of share repurchases. This is not the profile of a company in secular decline — it is the profile of a marketplace that has found a strategy that works, executed it consistently, and is now generating the kind of financial results that force investors to revisit old assumptions.
The backdrop includes a subplot that most retail investors are following in real time: GameStop CEO Ryan Cohen made an unsolicited offer to acquire eBay for $125 per share in May, which eBay’s board rejected as “neither credible nor attractive,” but Cohen has continued to pursue the deal and recently said he would personally put up $500 million toward the bid. Whether the deal ever materializes is genuinely uncertain. What is not uncertain is that a billionaire investor who has studied eBay’s books deeply enough to make a $56 billion offer has made a very public bet that this business is worth significantly more than where it currently trades. That context, sitting on top of an independently improving business, is the setup for Monday’s readers.
Key Technical and Fundamental Drivers
19% Revenue Growth, 18% GMV Growth → The Turnaround Is In the Numbers
Q1 2026 revenue grew 19% year-over-year and GMV grew 18%, showing that eBay’s focus-category strategy is finally translating into measurable top-line acceleration. This is not a one-quarter anomaly — it follows a deliberate multi-year strategy of doubling down on high-engagement categories including trading cards, collectibles, and used luxury goods where eBay has genuine competitive advantages over Amazon. eBay’s shares are up 24% year-to-date as the underlying business reaccelerates, but the consensus view among analysts who have reviewed the Q1 results is that the multiple still doesn’t fully reflect the trajectory.
33% First-Party Advertising Growth → High-Margin Revenue Layering On Top
First-party advertising revenue grew 33% in Q1, giving eBay a powerful high-margin monetization engine layered on top of existing marketplace activity. This is the detail that separates the current eBay from the eBay of three years ago. Marketplace advertising — where eBay earns incremental revenue from sellers who pay for better placement — carries software-like margins and grows as the platform grows without requiring proportional cost increases. At $33% growth rates, it is becoming a meaningful contributor to the overall earnings profile that most investors haven’t yet built into their models.
$639 Million Capital Return in Q1 → Management Confidence in the Share Price
eBay returned $639 million to shareholders in Q1 through buybacks and dividends, including $500 million of share repurchases. A management team buying back $500 million of stock in a single quarter is making an explicit statement about where they believe the intrinsic value of the business sits relative to the current share price. Combined with the company’s ongoing free cash flow generation, the capital return program provides a structural floor of demand beneath the stock that limits downside while the fundamental story continues to develop.
Ryan Cohen Optionality → $125 Per Share Bid Still in Play
GameStop proposed to acquire eBay at $125 per share in May, and while eBay rejected the offer, GameStop has continued to pursue the deal, creating a layer of optionality on top of an improving operating story. Cohen has said he will personally put up $500 million toward the bid and plans to unveil more details soon, keeping the $125 per share reference price visible in the market’s consciousness. Even if the deal never closes — and the financing skepticism is legitimate — the activist attention creates a floor of strategic value below which the board would face increasing pressure to respond, whether through accelerated buybacks, a strategic review, or some other form of shareholder value realization.
Q2 Earnings July 29 → Earnings Season Catalyst in Three Weeks
Q2 2026 earnings season begins in earnest the second full week of July, with FactSet forecasting S&P 500 earnings growth of 22% — the second consecutive quarter above 20%. eBay’s Q2 results on July 29 will be the next concrete test of whether the 19% revenue growth pace from Q1 is holding, whether advertising is continuing to scale, and whether management provides any update on the strategic situation. A Q2 print that confirms the acceleration would be the data point that closes the gap between where the stock trades and where the turnaround story implies it should.
Market Takeaway
eBay’s investment case in July 2026 sits at the intersection of three things that rarely appear together: a business that is genuinely reaccelerating after years of stagnation, a capital return program aggressive enough to signal real management conviction, and a high-profile activist investor willing to pay $125 per share for the whole company while the stock trades meaningfully below that level. You don’t need to believe the GameStop deal happens to find the setup interesting. The core business delivering 19% revenue growth and 33% advertising growth would be compelling without any of the Cohen drama.
The Depop acquisition expands eBay’s exposure to fashion resale and younger consumers, two areas where the company has historically lacked relevance, adding a longer-term optionality layer that management has been building quietly. The risks are real and worth naming: eBay continues to compete against Amazon, Walmart’s marketplace, and vertical competitors like StockX and GOAT in focus categories where the company has chosen to concentrate. The GameStop financing questions are legitimate — many Wall Street analysts questioned the deal’s financing and strategic rationale — and if Cohen ultimately walks away, the stock loses its $125 reference price floor. Q2 execution risk is real: a quarter that shows deceleration from Q1’s 19% pace would likely be punished in a market already nervous about rate hike expectations. For traders watching Monday’s open as the first full week of Q2 earnings season begins, eBay offers a rarely available combination: an old-economy name posting new-economy growth numbers, buying back stock aggressively, and trading with an activist catalyst that has put a specific dollar value on what the whole business might be worth