u/tradelydev ·
Reddit — r/ValueInvesting
· June 14, 2026 at 13:58
· ⬆ 23 pts
· 💬 34 comments
| View on Reddit ↗
AI Summary
Summary
The post chronicles GoPro’s collapse from an $11B pioneer to a $150M penny stock, blaming founder/owner mismanagement and a refusal to innovate.
Key evidence: market share dropped from 75% to 20%, cash reserves down to $50M, auditor warns of “substantial doubt” about going concern.
The author presents a well-sourced cautionary tale (Yahoo Finance, Inc., Forbes, TradeRange) rather than a speculative call, but the thesis is clearly bearish.
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▶ Full Post Text
GoPro is the most honest example of a company killing itself through its own managment decisions. It dominated an industry it had created, but after the owner cashed out he stopped trying and the company fell into disrepair. The $11 billion giant is now worth just $150 million.
Its market share fell from 75% to just 20%, as competitors like DJI and Insta360 entered the market with real innovation.
The companies cash reserves are down to $50 million and it has laid off another 20% of its remaining staff in a desperate restructuring attempt. Its auditor has warned there is "substantial doubt" about GoPro's ability to continue operating over the next year.
In the words of the analysis conclusion:
"Now, a pioneer that once captured the world's imagination was brought down by its own refusal to innovate, allowing more agile competitors to seize the market. From an $11 bn giant, GoPro is now a penny stock fighting for survival."
Main reference:
TradeRange.net (https://traderange.net/analysis/why-gopro-fell-27osst9g/)
Other sources:
Yahoo Finance (https://finance.yahoo.com/markets/stocks/articles/rise-fall-gopro-says-substantial-161951182.html)
Inc.com (https://www.inc.com/magazine/201802/tom-foster/gopro-camera-drone-challenges.html)
Forbes (https://www.forbes.com/sites/ryanmac/2017/02/02/behind-recall-gopro-karma-drone/)
GoPro’s market share cratered from 75% to 20%, cash is down to $50M, and its auditor expressed “substantial doubt” about survival. A company burning cash while losing share to innovative rivals (DJI, Insta360) faces high bankruptcy risk, creating a short opportunity as the market reprices failure probability. Short GPRO to capitalize on continued deterioration and likely delisting or restructuring, supported by clear fundamental decline and going-concern warnings. Short squeeze if a buyout or unexpected recovery occurs; low liquidity and high volatility in a penny stock; regulatory or financing lifeline could postpone collapse.