Reddit's debut will mark the first major tech initial public offering of the year and the first social media IPO since Pinterest went public in 2019.
Social media company Reddit filed its IPO prospectus with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday after a yearslong run-up. The company plans to trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol “RDDT.”
Reddit said it had $804 million in annual sales for 2023, up 20% from the $666.7 million it brought in the previous year, according to the filing.
The company said it has incurred net losses since its inception. It reported a net loss of $90.8 million for the year ended Dec. 31, 2023, compared to a net loss of $158.6 million the year prior.
Its market debut, expected in March, will mark the first major tech initial public offering of the year. It’s the first social media IPO since Pinterest went public in 2019.
Reddit first filed a confidential draft of its public offering prospectus with the Securities and Exchange Commission in December 2021.
I will short the ever-loving shit out of that stock. This is a no brainer.
It’s a TERRIBLE investment. The business model is completely flawed and dependent upon assumptions that there will be only positive growth in the user base.
Google is going to use Reddit to train its AI. That software is going to immediately become a smug, whiny, racist, pedophile femboy.
I look forward to capitalizing on this completely predictable sunbaked diaper.
Except the stock market (and all the cultists who worship it) don't inhabit the same reality as the rest of us.
It doesn't matter if Reddit is a good investment or not- what matters is if Reddit feels like a good investment to those assholes. The market can remain irrational a lot longer than you can remain solvent.
On top of what others have said keep in mind shorting isn't just you saying the stock will go down, it's you saying the stock will go down more than others think it will. Tbh I wouldn't even touch anything to do with shorting or options if I were you. It's incredibly risky and should only be done by people with more experience than you and I.
The website whose CEO was a moderator on r/jailbait, the community for sexualizing minors?
I thoroughly dislike spez, and I think there are a lot of reasons to be critical of him, but this isn't one of them. He was made a moderator of /r/jailbait at a time when people could be added as moderators without being notified or needing to accept any kind of invitation.
I'd rather see him criticised for the many awful things he's said and done over the years than for some non-reason like that.
It probably will. An IPO in a post ZIRP world for a company that isn't profitable and isn't a new high growth company isn't likely to be a popular stock.
If you think it’ll tank, you’re just as deluded as the people that came here in the Exodus (myself included) who think Reddit is dying.
The vast majority of people still use it and it will make money.
Edit: Just look at how pretty much all the largest corporations can treat their customers and still make money. Reddit will force ads down everyone’s throats and sure some will leave, but the vast majority done care. Also, you have to factor in selling data for AI and and targeted ads etc.
As sad as it is I think you're right. The same was said about facebook and even though they had a bumpy road it's bigger than ever before.
Nothing being sold at the stock market follows any logical rules, it's so much emotion that sells stuff. And as long as it makes money, nobody cares about racism or pedophilia or any other bad thing. I thought that's why we hate capitalism that much.
Interesting. Today Reddit sent a new TOS letter to an old email address (I don't have any Reddit accounts because fuck u/spez). The username it referenced was created today. I've never used this address with Reddit and don't have any confirmation emails in my box or spam indicating someone else tried to create this account. I changed the password and deleted the account, but I have to wonder if they might be trying to boost their subscriber numbers for an IPO.
There was another article today about them getting a contract from Google to train their AI on their content for millions a month. This should close the gap and lead to a possibly positive year for the first time ever this year.
They saw a 20% increase in revenue, likely due to consolidating people on their app, getting them the ad revenue boost. That impact is only a little over 6 months old. I'm curious what a year looks like.
The article I read said that Google will be paying 60 million dollars per year, so that still leaves them 30 million in the red considering the 90 million net loss of 2023.
The vast majority of companies arent profitable with their IPO. This is a relatively recent phenomenon.
The total IPO/year has tanked too.
All I'm getting at is that overall trends no longer apply as business and how stocks are approached has changed a lot
Spez is straight up luring the userbase into a rug pull scam.
Plenty of rubes will fall for it and the stock will be overvalued for a short period of time, then the institutional investors will pull out, then the rubes will panic sell, then institutional investors will slowly buy back in a little bit and it'll eventually reach some kind of baseline but never get back to where the redditors bought in at.
I just hope I can get some good puts in before the rug pull happens.
Shit, is that what they're doing? I got the email but I hadn't read it yet. That's dumb as hell. I was expecting actual stock in exchange for the content (i.e. throwaway jokes) I'd contributed over the years.
Oh well, I'd left my account up out of laziness. Guess it's time for it to go.
No. Reddit has built enough of a public image that I'm sure there will be enough people buying in without doing their due diligence that it'll rise. We're in the minority.