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Trade Desk Rallies as Market Looks Past Lingering Wall Street Concerns
31 May 2026
2 mins read

Trade Desk Rallies as Market Looks Past Lingering Wall Street Concerns

NEW YORK, May 31, 2026, 15:04 EDT

The Trade Desk shares ended the week down roughly 3.7%, even as Friday’s session saw a 1.94% gain to $21.56. Trading volume jumped, more than double midweek numbers. The digital ad stock lagged the record highs in the wider U.S. market.

The broader market has pushed growth stocks higher. The S&P 500 climbed 1.4% this week. The Nasdaq tacked on 2.4%. It’s the ninth week in a row of gains for the S&P, its longest streak since 2023.

Markets had only four sessions to work with after the Nasdaq’s calendar put U.S. trading on pause for Memorial Day, Monday, May 25. That gave investors less time this week to digest a new analyst warning and ongoing arguments about the company’s earnings.

Rothschild & Co Redburn’s Bianca Dallal started coverage of The Trade Desk with a Sell call and an $11 price target. Dallal flagged mounting competition and a hit to the company’s “take rate,” as rivals like Google and Amazon now let advertisers buy some programmatic ads for free or close to it. Programmatic advertising uses automated buying for digital spots. TipRanks

Friday’s gain didn’t make up for the 5.1% loss on Thursday. The move looked like a break in the selling rather than any kind of reversal. Shares stayed close to their lowest levels in years.

Trade Desk Q1 revenue rose 12% to $689 million, but adjusted EBITDA edged down to $206 million from $208 million last year. CEO Jeff Green said the company is “confident in our ability to lead and innovate.” The Trade Desk is guiding for Q2 revenue of at least $750 million. May results are still the key backdrop for the story. The Trade Desk

The Trade Desk’s stock price has been hit as competition becomes a real concern. According to the Wall Street Journal, the company’s market value dropped to about $10 billion from around $69 billion in late 2024. Investors are focused on rising competition from Amazon and Meta, and there are reported tensions between The Trade Desk and key agency partners like Publicis and Omnicom.

That’s the tough spot for shareholders. The Trade Desk made its pitch as a neutral ad-buying platform for the open web, not inside the walled gardens of big tech names. But with Amazon, Google and Meta leaning on their own data, AI tools and cheaper fees to hold on to ad budgets, investors could keep cutting the value of that independent middle tier.

Case for a rebound needs more evidence. The company highlights connected TV, retail media, and identity products as spots with growth. Customer retention stayed over 95% in Q1. If big advertisers keep moving budgets to automated buying on streaming and the open web, the stock might be sold off too much.

But the downside is pretty plain. If the ad market stays soft, agencies push back, or big competitors cut fees, the Q2 outlook could end up being the top, not the bottom. That risk is now sitting under the shares.

Macro data could grab more attention than corporate headlines in the days ahead. Investors will watch the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ May jobs report due Friday, June 5, at 8:30 a.m. ET. The Fed’s Beige Book lands Wednesday. Both releases may influence how the market reads consumer demand and ad spend.

The Trade Desk heads into Monday after a Friday bounce, but investors are waiting to see if buyers will hold their ground. The market isn’t convinced—one up day isn’t cutting it as growth stocks get repriced.

Mateusz Kaczmarek is a financial and technology journalist at TS2.tech, covering stocks, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and global market developments. A graduate of the Poznań University of Economics and Business, he previously worked in financial analysis before moving into business journalism. His reporting focuses on technology companies, market trends and the forces shaping global investment markets. Follow Mateusz Kaczmarek on Google News.

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