Top Wall Street brokerages start Reddit coverage but remain doubtful

Top Wall Street brokerages, whose investment banking units helped Reddit prepare for its public issue, started coverage of the social media company with doubts over its user growth, while staying bullish on ad revenue and its use of artificial intelligence (AI). Goldman Sachs and J.P.Morgan began with a “neutral” rating and a price target of $40 and $47, respectively, while Morgan Stanley had an “equal-weight” rating and a $45 price target.

Reddit shares were last trading at $40.66, below last month’s debut price of $47.

“DAUq (daily active unique users) growth has accelerated in recent quarters and there is meaningful headroom for growth, but for now Reddit’s base of 73 million users is relatively sub-scale,” J.P.Morgan analysts led by Doug Anmuth wrote in a note.

They estimated DAUq to hit 109 million users by 2026, but these figures still lagged peers like Meta Platforms’ Facebook and Elon Musk’s X by a wide margin.

“Reddit needs to prove it can meaningfully scale over time,” they said.

The social media company relies on advertising for a big share of its revenue, even though it touted AI in its initial public offering (IPO) as an area of growth.

Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Bank of America were among over a dozen underwriters for the Reddit IPO, all of whom had to wait till mid April to start coverage as required by industry practice.

“Valuation leaves us on sidelines as we wait for evidence of outsized user growth and faster execution,” said Morgan Stanley.

Deutsche Bank, Raymond James, Needham, Piper Sandler and Roth MKM were the most bullish on the stock with Needham’s $55 price target being the highest on Wall Street.

While Piper termed Reddit an “iconic internet asset”, Roth said the company is regarded as the “front page of the Internet” and deserved a premium valuation.

“Reddit’s large, unique, and fresh corpus of user-generated text content is now increasingly valuable to AI models,” Roth analysts said.

On the use of AI, J.P.Morgan said, “Reddit is early in ads monetization and the company’s corpus of historical information could represent a compelling source for LLM (large language model) training.”

“From a data monetization perspective, the data corpus of authentic human conversation at Reddit is unique,” Raymond James added.

Reddit’s popularity rose to new heights during the “meme-stock” saga of 2021 in which a group of retail investors collaborated on its forum “wallstreetbets” to buy shares of highly shorted companies like GameStop.

Earlier this month, brokerages Baird and Bernstein had initiated coverage on Reddit with concerns over the company turning a profit.

—Siddarth S, Reuters

https://www.fastcompany.com/91106416/reddit-wall-street-brokerages-growth?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Creată 1y | 17 apr. 2024, 23:20:15


Autentifică-te pentru a adăuga comentarii

Alte posturi din acest grup

Why the AI pin won’t be the next iPhone

One of the most frequent questions I’ve been getting from business execs lately is whether the

12 iul. 2025, 12:10:02 | Fast company - tech
Microsoft will soon delete your Authenticator passwords. Here are 3 password manager alternatives

Users of Microsoft apps are having a rough year. First, in May, the Windows maker

12 iul. 2025, 09:40:03 | Fast company - tech
Yahoo Creators platform hits record revenue as publisher bets big on influencer-led content

Yahoo’s bet on creator-led content appears to be paying off. Yahoo Creators, the media company’s publishing platform for creators, had its most lucrative month yet in June.

Launched in M

11 iul. 2025, 17:30:04 | Fast company - tech
GameStop’s Nintendo Switch 2 stapler sells for more than $100,000 on eBay after viral mishap

From being the face of memestock mania to going viral for inadvertently stapling the screens of brand-new video game consoles, GameStop is no stranger to infamy.

Last month, during the m

11 iul. 2025, 12:50:04 | Fast company - tech
Don’t take the race for ‘superintelligence’ too seriously

The technology industry has always adored its improbably audacious goals and their associated buzzwords. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is among the most enamored. After all, the name “Meta” is the resi

11 iul. 2025, 12:50:02 | Fast company - tech
Why AI-powered hiring may create legal headaches

Even as AI becomes a common workplace tool, its use in

11 iul. 2025, 12:50:02 | Fast company - tech
Gen Zers are posting their unemployment era on TikTok—and it’s way too real

Finding a job is hard right now. To cope, Gen Zers are documenting the reality of unemployment in 2025.

“You look sadder,” one TikTok po

11 iul. 2025, 10:30:04 | Fast company - tech