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One, that's not how this stuff works. And two, why do you care?
. . .I mean honestly, you're clearly the expert: what does success for AC:S look like and explicitly how did you see that translating to their stock price (which has been ludicrously inflated since 2020)?
"Generally, if a company's products sell well, leading to strong earnings and profitability, its stock price is likely to increase, not decrease."
Strong Earnings and Profitability:
A company's financial performance, including its ability to generate revenue and profits, is a primary driver of stock prices. If a company's products are selling well, this typically translates to higher sales and profits, which can lead to increased investor confidence and demand for the stock.
Investor Sentiment:
The overall feeling or attitude of investors towards a company and its stock plays a crucial role in determining its price. Positive news, such as strong sales figures or industry growth, can boost investor sentiment and lead to higher stock prices.
Supply and Demand:
The price of a stock is ultimately determined by the forces of supply and demand. If more investors want to buy a company's stock than sell it, the price tends to go up, and vice versa.
50000 steam players is not much for a big game like this. 1 million players across all platforms. Is not cutting it and plenty of those are ubisoft + subscription.
Veilguard had more players and was a financial failure. Assassins creed probably cost about 500 million so they need 10 million copies to be good
"Generally, if a company's products sell well, leading to strong earnings and profitability, its stock price is likely to increase, not decrease."
Strong Earnings and Profitability:
A company's financial performance, including its ability to generate revenue and profits, is a primary driver of stock prices. If a company's products are selling well, this typically translates to higher sales and profits, which can lead to increased investor confidence and demand for the stock.
Investor Sentiment:
The overall feeling or attitude of investors towards a company and its stock plays a crucial role in determining its price. Positive news, such as strong sales figures or industry growth, can boost investor sentiment and lead to higher stock prices.
Supply and Demand:
The price of a stock is ultimately determined by the forces of supply and demand. If more investors want to buy a company's stock than sell it, the price tends to go up, and vice versa
Well if ubisoft claims they have 1 million players (why not say the sales but players?) that indicates they are trying to mislead investors. Seeing the low numbers on steam that also means a lot of people went for the cheapest option, subscribe to ubisoft -+ for a month for 18 dollar and cancel after that month instead of paying 70 dollar. That means even a lower number of money for ubisoft. They are screwed I tell you and the investors know it. Hence the stock sales and probably shorting of stock.
You can spam this AI-slop as much as you want but it doesn't mean much. I'll ask again since you already had an answer to the prompt in your original post: what should the stock price be for UBISOFT if the game's sales were doing well? What movement did you expect to see? Back to 2021 levels when, even after the release of Valhalla - a game that made UBISOFT billions - their overall stock was dropping?
. . .I mean, is this pointless thread your attempt to engage with a game you can't afford? Is that what's going on; you're terminally online (and a member of "Sweet Baby Inc. Detected" - whoof, the second-hand-cringe is strong there) and just needing something to snark at (hence the reliance on AI-slop to give your impotent-rage a voice)?
Hahah. Bro is genuinely mad cant come up with excuses why the stock is going down while the reviews are so positive. Ubisoft lost alot of audience during Origins, Odyssey, Valhalla. that is why the stocks went down even though the games did sell a bit to another audience of rpg games. The original AC games were really popular. These news whatever you want to call them are not with their strange political themes.