Reddit Inc Class A logo

Reddit Inc Class A (RDDT)

Market Closed
18 Jun, 20:00
NYSE NYSE
$
174. 96
+9.01
+5.4294%
$
31.96B Market Cap
- P/E Ratio
- Div Yield
5.33M Volume
- Eps
$ 165.95
Previous Close
Analysts:
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Day Range
165.88 176.22
Year Range
119.27 282.95
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Reddit's Q4 Earnings Test: Soaring Stock Meets Elon Musk-Fueled Chaos

Reddit's Q4 Earnings Test: Soaring Stock Meets Elon Musk-Fueled Chaos

Reddit Inc RDDT is set to report its fourth-quarter earnings on Wednesday. Wall Street expects 25 cents in EPS and $405.26 million in revenues as the company reports after market hours.

Benzinga | 1 year ago
RDDT "Low-Cost Entry Point" for Advertisers, GOOGL & META Main Competition

RDDT "Low-Cost Entry Point" for Advertisers, GOOGL & META Main Competition

Reddit (RDDT) ran up more than 500% since its IPO last March, and @LikeFolio's Andy Swan points to its advertising platform as the main growth engine. He credits the company's use of A.I.

Youtube | 1 year ago
Reddit Stock Is Still Red-Hot With Earnings On Deck. Here Are The Numbers To Watch.

Reddit Stock Is Still Red-Hot With Earnings On Deck. Here Are The Numbers To Watch.

Reddit stock has soared more than 300% since it went public last March. Its Q4 earnings report is due late Wednesday.

Investors | 1 year ago
Reddit teams with Intercontinental Exchange to build financial-analytics products

Reddit teams with Intercontinental Exchange to build financial-analytics products

The partnership will connect anonymous conversations on Reddit to Intercontinental Exchange's data-science and machine-learning infrastructure to provide new datasets and analytics, Reddit said.

Marketwatch | 1 year ago
Why "The People are the Product" for RDDT and TTD A.I. Usage

Why "The People are the Product" for RDDT and TTD A.I. Usage

Ahead of Reddit (RDDT) earnings, shares are trading off of all-time highs. "These platforms live and die based off the usage" of its subscribers, says Tom Essaye.

Youtube | 1 year ago
What Analysts Think of Reddit Stock Ahead of Earnings

What Analysts Think of Reddit Stock Ahead of Earnings

Reddit (RDDT) is set to report fourth-quarter earnings after the market closes Wednesday, with analysts expecting growing revenue and users.

Investopedia | 1 year ago
Reddit Stock Before Q4 Earnings: A Smart Buy or Risky Investment?

Reddit Stock Before Q4 Earnings: A Smart Buy or Risky Investment?

RDDT's fourth-quarter performance is expected to have benefited from strong ad sales and AI growth despite challenges from election effects and rising competition.

Zacks | 1 year ago
I have 4 million credit card points on my credit card – what should I use them on?

I have 4 million credit card points on my credit card – what should I use them on?

File today’s Reddit discussion under the rubric “nice problems to have.” Our caller this morning, let’s call her “Jan”, put an image up on Reddit showing that she currently has 4,078,926 Chase Sapphire credit card reward points accumulated. She also has 4,167 more points pending since her January statement came out, probably just a week or two ago. So at minimum, Jan appears to be putting more than $4,000 a month in charges on her Chase card, or about $50,000 a year. Potentially, she might be charging as much as $20,000 a month to the card, depending on how quickly those last 4,167 points racked up. In fact, I’d venture to say she’s almost certainly charging at least that much. Even at $20,000 a month, it would have taken Jan more than 17 years to accumulate this many Chase card points. And that right there is the first thing we need to talk about. Key Points Unlike bank accounts and investment portfolios, credit card point balances don’t automatically grow in value. Points left on a card balance should be used, so as to not leave money on the table. Cashing out points is the easiest way to use them. Spending them on hotels and airfare may be the best use. The right travel credit card can take you to places you’ve never dreamed of. Click here now to see our top picks. (Sponsor) When dealing with credit card points, procrastination is not your friend Everyone loves a fat bank account. It makes us objectively, and reasonably happy when we see our savings pile up substantially in a bank account, a stock market portfolio, or in this case, a Chase points account. But here’s the thing: Money in a bank account earns interest. Money in a stock market account, if invested wisely, has proven over time to grow even faster, averaging 10% or 11% annual growth, according to historical back-testing. But “points” earned from using a credit card? Well, those just sit there until used. They don’t earn compound interest. The don’t grow at all unless you keep spending money to generate the points. That’s why I think we can identify one big mistake Jan is making right off the bat. In her quest to rack up a big number of Chase points, she’s almost certainly lost the chance to earn interest income on those points, and for nearly two straight decades! How much money has Jan lost, and how much is she still losing, for sitting on those unused points? Well, the losses would have smarted small, back when the points balance was smaller, but they’ve snowballed over time as the account got bigger. Chase points are generally valued at a penny apiece when converted into cash through a cash-back or statement credit offer. 4.1 million points (I’m rounding here) are therefore worth about $41,000. When you consider that it’s still possible to find bank savings accounts that pay 4% and better interest rates, that means Jan is effectively losing more than $1,600 annually in interest that she could be earning today… but isn’t. A nice problem to have Now, there’s an obvious solution to this problem. Rather than letting those points sit around unused, Jan could cash them out in the form of a cash-back check. She could then deposit this money in a high-yield savings account, and immediately begin earning interest on her new cash. That’s option No. 1, and I’d consider it the default option in a situation like this. Chase does offer other options for using accumulated points, however. Jan could: Apply the points to her monthly credit card bill as an account credit. It would probably take her a couple months to use all these points, if she’s charging $20,000 a month to her card. Or Jan could use the points in lieu of cash to pay for certain “merchandise” and/or “dining and sporting events” that Chase Bank promotes and/or buy gift cards with the points. Or she could spend the points on hotels and airfare, booking reservations through Chase’s website. Depending on which Card Sapphire card Jan holds, points spent this way are worth either 1.25 or 1.5 pennies each. So used this way, her points that are worth $41,000 when converted to cash could be worth more than $60,000 in travel purchases. Or Jan can transfer points to various hotel and airline rewards programs, converting them into points of those Such transfers are generally valued at a 1-for-1 ratio. But because different companies price services for different numbers of points, whether this will be a good use of the points will depend very much on which program she chooses. Depending on how savvy a shopper Jan is, she can probably make the very best use of her points through one of the last two options. However, the first option, cashing out the points and then spending or investing them as she likes, is the simplest and easiest option. It’s the one I would choose were I in her shoes. The post I have 4 million credit card points on my credit card – what should I use them on? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

247wallst | 1 year ago
Reddit's Stock Soars Even As Musk-Related Tensions Rise

Reddit's Stock Soars Even As Musk-Related Tensions Rise

Reddit Inc. RDDT has been riding a bullish wave, surging 338.46% in the past year, 33.30% year-to-date, and 23.22% over the past month.

Benzinga | 1 year ago
Reddit Q4 Preview: Up 200%, And Still Room To Run

Reddit Q4 Preview: Up 200%, And Still Room To Run

Reddit's stock has surged 22% since December, outperforming the S&P 500 by 17x, as I was bullish on its strong Advertising and Data Licensing growth and expanding margins. Its Q3 FY24 saw revenue of $348.4M, a 68% YoY increase, with Advertising Revenue contributing 90% and Data Licensing growing 547% YoY due to new partnerships. Despite risks like global liquidity and tariffs, Reddit's consistent earnings beats and raised guidance justify a new price target of $275, a 32% upside.

Seekingalpha | 1 year ago
Reddit: Update On My Top Conviction Pick Amidst Tech Bubble (Rating Downgrade)

Reddit: Update On My Top Conviction Pick Amidst Tech Bubble (Rating Downgrade)

Reddit has surged nearly 200% since I named it a high-conviction pick, driven by generative AI-powered translations and impressive revenue growth. The company has shown a knack for crushing guidance and consensus estimates by wide margins. Tech stocks look bubbly again, and it's time for another look at Reddit stock.

Seekingalpha | 1 year ago
Reddit: Market Overestimates AI Data Licensing's Long-Term Value

Reddit: Market Overestimates AI Data Licensing's Long-Term Value

Reddit's Q3 showed strong growth (revenue +68% Y/Y, DAUq +47%), turning profitable with $29.9M net income. AI data licensing contributed $33.2M, marking a new revenue stream. While the AI training data market could reach $8B by 2030, RDDT's potential 5% share ($400M) faces risks from competition, user backlash, and contract uncertainties. DCF analysis reveals that the current $35B valuation implies an unsustainable 40% annual revenue growth over nine years. Even with a 25% FCF margin, it still needs 30% growth.

Seekingalpha | 1 year ago
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