Today: 7 June 2026
The Trade Desk Stock Sinks After Q1 Earnings: Why Wall Street Is Worried Again
8 May 2026
2 mins read

The Trade Desk Stock Sinks After Q1 Earnings: Why Wall Street Is Worried Again

LOS ANGELES, May 8, 2026, 05:09 PDT

  • The Trade Desk dropped over 12% in U.S. premarket after missing first-quarter profit forecasts and putting out weaker-than-expected guidance for Q2.
  • Revenue climbed 12% to $688.9 million. Still, net income dropped, and the pace of growth lagged last year.
  • Analysts cited tougher competition, agency pushback and a slowdown in some ad categories. The company, for its part, highlighted connected TV, audio, and AI tools as ongoing areas for growth.

The Trade Desk’s stock tumbled more than 12% ahead of the bell Friday, with the advertising-technology firm rattling investors by posting a mixed Q1 and projecting Q2 revenue that missed analysts’ targets. Shares were changing hands at $20.60 premarket, off 12.32% from Thursday’s $23.49 close.

The selloff is sparking fresh questions among investors about whether The Trade Desk can hold onto its growth premium as advertisers tighten budgets and move money between competing ad platforms. The company operates a demand-side platform—software that lets brands and agencies buy digital ads, usually via automated programmatic auctions.

For the quarter ended March 31, revenue climbed to $688.9 million, up from $616.0 million a year ago, according to a regulatory filing. Net income came in at $40.0 million, down from $50.7 million, and diluted earnings per share edged down to 8 cents from 10 cents.

The company is guiding for second-quarter revenue of no less than $750 million, with adjusted EBITDA pegged around $260 million. That profit metric excludes interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization and certain other expenses. Analysts, for their part, had been looking for revenue closer to $771 million, market reports show.

Chief Executive Jeff Green described the quarter as “strong” in the release, though he pointed to ongoing macro headwinds. Green reiterated that The Trade Desk is sticking with “objective, transparent and data-driven media buying on the open internet.” The Trade Desk

During the earnings call, interim CFO Tahnil Davis pointed to “strong trends across CTV and audio” as the engine behind first-quarter growth. Video, including Connected TV — ads delivered via streaming on television screens — accounted for just over half of the business, Davis noted. Audio, though, outpaced every other channel in growth. MarketBeat

Wall Street didn’t wait around. William Blair’s Ralph Schackart cut his rating on the stock to Market Perform from Outperform, pointing to first-quarter survey results: digital ad buyers reported The Trade Desk losing ground. Schackart’s team sees that trend sticking.

Oppenheimer lowered its rating to Perform from Outperform and dropped its $35 price target, citing a lack of catalysts for the shares unless revenue growth picks up. The firm noted it’s still not clear when The Trade Desk will roll out its AI-driven, agent-integrated ad-buying products.

The stock remains clouded by a dispute dating back to March. At the time, Reuters revealed Publicis had told clients to steer clear of The Trade Desk’s platform after an audit; Publicis claimed an independent review found the company “did not pass the audit.” The Trade Desk countered, insisting it was “not true” that it failed. Reuters

Rivalry in the space has intensified. Wedbush trimmed its price target on The Trade Desk to $21 from $23, maintaining a Neutral stance. The firm pointed to the recent Publicis setback and a broader industry tilt toward closed-loop performance models favored by players like Amazon. Still, analysts noted The Trade Desk retains strengths—frequency controls, broad publisher reach, and buying flexibility spanning connected TV, display, audio, and out-of-home.

The danger here: this might not be a simple cycle. If the agency standoff drags on, or if major advertisers keep shifting spending toward Amazon, Google, or Meta, then The Trade Desk’s reputation as an independent open-internet player could come under heavier, longer-lasting pressure—particularly in connected TV, where rivals are crowding in for the same ad budgets.

Green told analysts talks with Publicis are still in progress, adding there’s “not really anything incremental to add” when it comes to whether agency softness played into the Q2 outlook. Davis called 2026 a “year of disciplined reinvestment”—headcount growth should remain slower than revenue gains, and they’re targeting a full-year adjusted EBITDA margin of at least 40%. MarketBeat

Stock Market Today

  • ETH Zurich's Quantum Breakthrough Produces Certified Randomness for Enhanced Security
    June 7, 2026, 10:07 AM EDT. Researchers at ETH Zurich, led by Renato Renner, have linked two qubits over 30 meters using quantum entanglement to generate certified randomness. Published in Nature, this study demonstrates randomness guaranteed by the laws of quantum physics rather than hardware assumptions, marking a departure from classical deterministic models. The technology promises significant advances in cryptography, aiding secure key generation and authentication, with applications in gaming and lottery systems. This quantum method provides a new standard of unpredictability, underpinning stronger security protocols and exemplifying quantum advantage over classical computing approaches, potentially reshaping security frameworks after 2026.

Latest articles

Keel Shares Tumble After $400 Million AI Infrastructure Move

Keel Shares Tumble After $400 Million AI Infrastructure Move

7 June 2026
Keel Infrastructure shares plunged 13.49% to $5.13 after upsizing its convertible note sale to $400 million, testing investor confidence as the company shifts from bitcoin mining to AI data centers amid a tech selloff and ongoing operating losses.
Intel Shares Sink After Heavy Drop—What’s Ahead for INTC Stock

Intel Shares Sink After Heavy Drop—What’s Ahead for INTC Stock

7 June 2026
Intel shares plunged 11.4% to $99.17 on Friday amid a 10.3% drop in the PHLX Semiconductor Index—its worst day since March 2020—as a strong May jobs report fueled fears of prolonged Fed rate hikes, while disappointing AI-chip outlooks from peers hit chip stocks hard despite Intel announcing new AI-focused partnerships with Hitachi and Foxconn.
Nokia drops after fast AI rally, traders stay focused

Nokia’s Week Stays Unsettled as AI Optimism Hits Debt Check

7 June 2026
Nokia shares plunged 5.87% Friday to €13.08 after issuing €500 million in new debt to refinance 2028 notes, as investors weighed AI stock volatility and awaited key London investor meetings June 10; despite the drop, shares remained up 4.72% for the week, with analysts citing both AI-driven growth and risks from competitive and cost pressures.
Nvidia Shares Drop Hard; AI Trade Faces Test Monday

Nvidia Shares Drop Hard; AI Trade Faces Test Monday

7 June 2026
Nvidia lost over $300 billion in value Friday as a chip stock rout hit after a strong jobs report fueled Fed rate hike fears; shares fell 6.2% to $205.10, despite record revenue and bullish forecasts, with traders bracing for Monday’s open amid concerns higher rates and AI-linked IPOs could draw cash away from chip leaders.
American Airlines Stock Bounced. Fuel Costs May Drive the Next Move

American Airlines Stock Bounced. Fuel Costs May Drive the Next Move

7 June 2026
American Airlines shares rebounded 1.5% Friday to $13.50 despite a 7.8% weekly drop and surging jet fuel costs, as investors weighed whether fare hikes and premium demand can offset profit hits from temporary route cuts and a $4 billion fuel expense, with the stock’s next move hinging on fuel prices, fare power and margin risks.
Cloudflare AI Layoffs Hit 1,100 Jobs After Q1 Earnings Beat; Stock Slides
Previous Story

Cloudflare AI Layoffs Hit 1,100 Jobs After Q1 Earnings Beat; Stock Slides

Rocket Lab Stock Pops After Record $200 Million Quarter. The Bigger Story Is Neutron
Next Story

Rocket Lab Stock Pops After Record $200 Million Quarter. The Bigger Story Is Neutron

Go toTop