Why GameStop’s bid for eBay echoes one of the worst business deals of all time
By the start of 2000, I was already a veteran writer for Fortune warning our readers that the dot.com craze had lifted Nasdaq valuations to unsustainable highs. All of the time-honored metrics pointed to the same outcome—crash ahead! Then, AOL and Time Warner, Fortune ‘s parent as owner of magazine-maker Time Inc., issued a shocker for the ages that, as it turned out, confirmed my worst fears: The tiny internet hotshot, its brand barely a decade old, was purchasing the fabled media colossus multiple times its size. For the announcement at Time Warner’s Manhattan headquarters, the media empire’s CEO Jerry Levin, appearing sans tie or jacket, took the stage alongside AOL chief Steve Case, and avowed his delight at taking Case’s offer since “I accept dot.com valuations.” Today, that transaction is generally cited as epitomizing arguably the craziest interlude in the annals of U.S. equity markets, and vilified as the worst big deal ever. So bad tha...