Take-Two Interactive finally put an end to speculation with a firm November 2026 release for Grand Theft Auto VI. Yet the market’s reaction was anything but celebratory. Shares shed more than 4% on Friday as a cautious outlook for the coming fiscal year overshadowed the long-awaited launch date.
The fourth-quarter numbers themselves were solid. Adjusted earnings hit $0.80 per share, handily beating the $0.56 analysts had penciled in. Net bookings came in at $1.58 billion, slightly ahead of estimates and virtually unchanged from a year earlier. A growing share of those bookings came from recurring player spending, which now accounts for the bulk of revenue. But the forward view told a different story.
Management guided for fiscal 2027 net bookings in a range of $8.0 billion to $8.2 billion. That represents roughly 20% growth from the record $6.72 billion posted in fiscal 2026, but it fell about 11% short of the consensus estimate of $9.13 billion — a gap of more than $1.1 billion at the midpoint. Investors hit the sell button immediately. The stock closed at €196.60 in Frankfurt, leaving it down 5.84% on the week and pushing it just below its 200-day moving average. Since the start of the year, the loss has widened to 8.43%.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Take-Two?
Grand Theft Auto VI is now scheduled for November 19, 2026, on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S. CEO Strauss Zelnick used the earnings call to dismiss any lingering delay rumors, confirming that the marketing campaign will kick off after June 21 with pre-orders opening at the same time. A PC version was not mentioned, underscoring the company’s console-first strategy. Zelnick said the title is expected to generate over $1 billion in operating cash flow, which will be earmarked for organic growth, shareholder returns, and potential studio acquisitions. Analysts remain divided on the risk. UBS, Raymond James, and Wedbush kept price targets around $300, with Wedbush raising the probability of a November launch to 90% from 75%. Wells Fargo trimmed its target to $287 while maintaining an “overweight” call, and MoffettNathanson cut its fair value to $196, roughly in line with current trading. JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley called the guidance a classic case of “under-promise, over-deliver.” Morgan Stanley alone expects some 40 million units of GTA VI to sell in fiscal 2027.
The company’s legacy portfolio also lent a hand. Red Dead Redemption 2 has now surpassed 85 million copies sold, posting its best sales year since its 2018 debut. NBA 2K set a record for bookings, and GTA V has crossed the 230 million unit mark — setting an extraordinary benchmark for its successor. For now, the near-term chart picture hinges on the 50-day moving average at €183.05. A breach below that level could invite further selling, while a hold would keep the upper end of the recent trading range in play. The path to recovery, it seems, runs straight through November.
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