In a move that surprised few but disappointed some, eBay has formally rejected a $55.5 billion takeover bid from GameStop. The offer, which would have merged two distinctly different retail platforms, was dismissed by eBay’s board as 'not in the best interests of shareholders'. The rejection comes amid heightened volatility in US markets, yet UK tech stocks have remained remarkably stable, suggesting that the contagion of American market jitters is being contained by the Atlantic.
For those who follow the numbers, this rejection is a textbook case of boardroom prudence. GameStop, a company that has reinvented itself from a brick-and-mortar video game retailer to a digital marketplace for collectibles and NFTs, was clearly reaching for a bigger slice of the e-commerce pie. But eBay, with its own established auction and resale platform, saw little synergy. The $55.5bn price tag, while hefty, would have required significant debt financing, and in the current high-interest rate environment, that is a gamble even the most bullish investors would hesitate to take. Markets responded predictably: GameStop’s shares dropped 4% in after-hours trading, while eBay’s rose a modest 1.2%.
What is more interesting is the UK’s reaction. Or rather, the lack of one. The FTSE 350 technology index barely budged, closing at 8,432 points, a 0.1% decline that could be attributed to profit-taking rather than panic. This calm is telling. While American markets have been whipsawed by earnings season, inflation fears, and hawkish Fed rhetoric, UK tech stocks have been insulated. Why? Because British investors are a pragmatic lot. They have priced in the reality of higher gilt yields and a Bank of England that is in no mood to cut rates soon. The GameStop-eBay saga is seen as a US sideshow, not a UK drama.
Capital flight remains the elephants in the room. Global investors, spooked by the US debt ceiling and regional banking stress, are looking for havens. Yet, they are not piling into UK equities with abandon. The pound has strengthened slightly against the dollar, but that is more a reflection of dollar weakness than sterling strength. UK tech, despite its stability, lacks the growth narratives of its American peers. The market is pricing in a 'steady as she goes' scenario, which is fine for dividends but dull for capital appreciation.
Fiscal responsibility, or the lack thereof, is another factor. The UK government’s spending spree continues, albeit with more restraint than across the pond. But the market is watching. The 10-year gilt yield remains at elevated levels, around 4.3%, reflecting a premium investors demand for holding UK debt. This fiscal backdrop constrains central bank policy, meaning that the Bank of England cannot print its way out of trouble. For the City, that is a sobering thought.
In the end, the eBay-GameStop episode underscores a broader trend: US volatility does not always translate to UK turbulence. The UK market, for all its flaws, remains a bastion of relative stability. But that stability comes at a cost: lower growth and fewer fireworks. For now, investors seem content with that trade-off. The bottom line? eBay dodged a bullet, GameStop licks its wounds, and the UK tech sector carries on, unbothered.








