The stock of Take-Two Interactive, parent company of Rockstar Games, is caught in a familiar storm. For the second time in three years, the company is grappling with a significant cybersecurity breach, yet Wall Street’s bullish stance remains unshaken. This divergence highlights the market’s singular focus on a future blockbuster, even as present-day challenges mount.
Hacker group ShinyHunters, active since 2020 and linked to attacks on firms like Google and Ticketmaster, publicly leaked stolen Rockstar data a day ahead of its own deadline. The breach reportedly contains granular sales metrics from GTA Online and Red Dead Online, broken down by country and time period. Rockstar initially downplayed the April 11th incident, calling it a “limited amount of non-material corporate information” siphoned via a third-party provider. The attackers gained access not through Rockstar directly, but by compromising authentication tokens linked to Anodot, an external SaaS platform for cloud cost analysis, which provided a pathway to a connected Snowflake account.
The immediate market reaction was sharp but brief. In pre-market trading, Take-Two’s stock plunged over 6% on the news, though it recovered those losses throughout the day. The share price, hovering around 172 EUR, already sits roughly 20% below its level from the past three months. This latest security lapse, reminiscent of the 2022 leak of early GTA VI footage via Slack, hits a stock already under pressure.
Adding to the near-term uncertainty is a clear pattern of insider selling. Over the past three months, company insiders have sold shares worth approximately $15.3 million without a single reported purchase. CEO Strauss Zelnick alone divested around $13 million in stock over the last twelve months at prices near $215. Operationally, the company posted a GAAP net loss of $92.9 million for the third quarter of fiscal 2026, an improvement from the $133.9 million loss in the prior quarter but a reminder of ongoing profitability challenges.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Take-Two?
Despite this, analyst sentiment paints a radically different picture. All 16 covering analysts unanimously rate the stock a “Strong Buy,” with an average price target of $283.81—about 46% above the current price. Targets range from a low of $260 to a high of $300. This optimism is almost entirely anchored on the late 2026 launch of Grand Theft Auto VI. Take-Two has not altered the November 19, 2026 release date and forecasts record Net Bookings for fiscal 2027, with pre-orders and marketing set to begin this summer.
The financial expectations are staggering. The Zacks consensus projects earnings per share of $3.91 and revenue of $6.67 billion for the current fiscal year, representing year-over-year jumps of roughly 91% and 18%, respectively. The company is also bridging the gap with its mobile strategy. Its Zynga division is currently testing Borderlands Mobile to gather player feedback, a title analysts see as a financial bridge until GTA VI arrives. This follows Zelnick’s 2022 outline to gradually bring core franchises like Red Dead and NBA 2K to mobile platforms.
This forward-looking confidence comes at a steep valuation premium. Take-Two trades at a price-to-sales ratio of 5.7x, well above the industry average of 1.2x and the peer group average of 4.2x. The stock currently trades about 14% below its 200-day moving average, indicating both perceived upside potential and the high expectations baked into the price. Should sentiment around GTA VI cool due to a delay or disappointing sales, sustaining that premium would be difficult. For now, investors are betting that the promise of a record-breaking launch will outweigh the very real headlines of data breaches and insider sales.
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