Johnny Awesome
Veteran
I agree that anything over $5B is too much. MS should buy 4-5 other studios instead.
Plenty of promising smaller developers out there looking at the more enjoyable Game Pass games. I wouldn't think they were tied to major publishers yet. Trouble is, they'll be years out from their follow up releases.
Jonathan Blow I believe is quite independent(witness, braid). He might be able to do some pretty amazing things if he had big budget to use.
Expected yes, but nobody knows how much Cyberpunk 2077 will sell and the company has not posted guidance on this. So it's guesswork. Personally, I'd rather wait it out and see what the sales are. If they're good or better than good, then wait for the dividends to roll in.Stock prices reflect expected future earnings.
I thought Blow had something seriously against MS. Something he had difficulty with early and MS was far from helpful. Something he still carried around with him.
Blow sees writing his own engines as a fundamental thing. He wrote his own programming language. He's that sort of programmer. It doesn't seem like a good fit for Xbox's not so close to the metal platform.
hmm, good point. What was I trying to articulate again, 'cos danmed if I know??So what platform does he write them for, Windows PC which is further away from the metal than consoles?
There is nothing stopping CD Project Red from buying up outstanding shares, delisting and going private with a planned sale to a third party. Its actually easier for a public company to go private then the other way around.
There is nothing stopping CD Project Red from buying up outstanding shares, delisting and going private with a planned sale to a third party. Its actually easier for a public company to go private then the other way around.
Companies can buy stocks but there are restrictions regarding that. A group of owners that are in control of the board of CDPR could use stock buybacks in some kind of scheme to delist the company, but that would be illegal.
Companies are ultimately owned by people and it is the owners that decide what will happen to the company.
The key is that the buyback share price has to be high enough to convince enough people to sell their shares back to the company. The company can't force shareholders to sell them their shares. If enough major shareholders don't wish the company to go private then there may not be a reasonably high price that the company can offer to get enough shares to delist.
Imagine, for example, how high Apple would have to set their buyback share price if they wanted to go private? It'd likely have to be significantly higher than the going share price...like a LOT significantly.
Regards,
SB