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Reddit has solid start on 1st day as publicly traded company. Here's what to know

- Jenna Benchetrit

Reddit became a publicly traded company on Thurs‐ day, making it the first ma‐ jor U.S. tech firm - let alone social media platform - to do so in years.

The initial public offering (IPO) on the New York Stock

Exchange gives the public an opportunit­y to invest in the company's stock for the first time, under the ticker RDDT.

Investors valued the pop‐ ular discussion forum site at nearly $9 billion US when trading opened, well above the company's target valua‐ tion of $6.4 billion.

While Reddit priced its shares at $34 US each, they were trading for $50.44 apiece at the closing bell - a solid start to a hotly antici‐ pated IPO.

Until its IPO, Reddit was primarily owned by a handful of executives, including CEO Steve Huffman and COO Jen‐ nifer Wong; several com‐ panies, such as the media firm Advance Publicatio­ns; and other individual in‐ vestors, like OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, who served on the company's board for a time and held a considerab­le stake of its shares.

The platform, which launched in 2005 as part of the first wave of social media, has since become one of the world's most visited websites - beating even Ama‐ zon.com's daily traffic.

Why it took so long for Reddit to go public

After years of circling around an IPO, Reddit first tried to go public in December 2021, fil‐ ing an S-1 form with the U.S. Securities Exchange Commis‐ sion. At the time, the com‐ pany had a valuation of $10 billion US.

But the listing was pushed back and it eventually fizzled out in early 2022 due to sev‐ eral compoundin­g factors: the U.S. economy was in rough shape, Russia had launched its invasion of Ukraine and the Fed decided to raise its key interest rate.

Plus, "internally, they weren't quite ready," said Paresh Dave, a senior writer at tech outlet Wired. "They had to do all these audits, they had to make sure that they could do their ac‐ counting on time. And having some of those things in place just hadn't been a priority for so long that it took a while to get all that sloppiness out of the picture."

That's because the com‐ pany had been dealing with issues related to content moderation, making it diffi‐ cult for Reddit to invest in its ad business, he added.

The site relies on users who volunteer as modera‐ tors called "mods" to make sure other Redditors follow guidelines - a uniquely nonobtrusi­ve approach to online content moderation that also gives mods the power to destabiliz­e the site.

That's precisely what hap‐ pened last summer, when many of the site's mods re‐ stricted or locked their popu‐ lar subreddits in protest of Reddit's plan to charge busi‐ nesses for access to its appli‐ cation programmin­g inter‐ face (API).

The API, which lets users download and exchange da‐ ta, is used by moderators to help them navigate the site. But it's also a goldmine for companies who want to cash in on Reddit's treasure trove of data (more on that later).

Some Reddit users are worried that the IPO will change the site's user experi‐ ence, and that the company hasn't proven it can properly monetize the website.

"Reddit is just a very use‐ ful resource to so many peo‐ ple, and people want to see it preserved, but there's still the question over whether going public will change that and change that nature and change that usefulness of Reddit because they'll be fo‐ cused on other priorities po‐ tentially, like growing their share price," Dave said.

Some U.S. Redditors can buy at the IPO

The company has proposed what's called a directed share program (DSP), which allows a select group of people to buy the stock at its initial price on the day of the IPO. Reddit's DSP has drummed up excitement because it gives some of its most active users access to the program, too.

Reddit has reserved eight per cent of the total IPO shares for eligible users and mods, plus certain board members and friends and family members of its em‐ ployees and directors, ac‐ cording to Reuters. The IPO shares are priced at $34 US each.

There's one catch: Canadi‐ ans can't take part in the DSP, as Reddit user Brennan Valenzuela recently learned the hard way. The Torontobas­ed customer experience manager received a message from Reddit inviting him to participat­e - but his dreams

were dashed when he read the fine print.

LISTEN | Why Reddit users staged a revolt last summer:

"I had no idea that just being a part of the Reddit community afforded the op‐ portunity to be able to buy in at the IPO. So I was really ex‐ cited until I got to about the second paragraph, where I read it was only open to U.S. residents," Valenzuela said.

CBC reached out to Reddit for more informatio­n, but was told that "for legal rea‐ sons, we cannot say anything more than what's in the S-1."

Valenzuela, who has been an active Reddit user for a decade, said he isn't con‐ cerned about the user expe‐ rience changing after the IPO - and he might buy the stock after the company has listed.

"I'm interested. I would buy a little bit and then see where they're going before I make a bigger commitment," he said.

But Reddit has a notori‐ ously rowdy community of retail investors - a potential risk that the company ac‐ knowledged in its filing.

WATCH | How r/wall‐ streetbets drove up stock prices:

Its r/wallstreet­bets sub‐ reddit was the birthplace of the "meme stock" trend, when a small army of individ‐ ual users banded together to drive up the stock price for the electronic­s company GameStop and the entertain‐ ment company AMC - under‐ cutting more experience­d in‐ vestors' attempts to short the stocks.

"There's a fear that maybe that happens with Reddit, too, if these users sort of get excited about it. So all of that volatility is certainly a risk to going public," said Dave.

Touting ad potential, selling content to feed AI

Reddit generates most of its revenue - 98 per cent of it, in the last two years - from ad‐ vertising sales, according to the S-1. But it's facing stiff competitio­n in advertisin­g revenue from other social platforms like TikTok.

The company hasn't been profitable in its nearly 20 years of existence, a fact that the filing acknowledg­ed as a risk. "We have a history of net losses and we may not be able to achieve or main‐ tain profitabil­ity in the fu‐ ture," it reads.

"I do think for a company like this that's been unprof‐ itable for such a long time that it's probably good to come into the public markets and add a little bit of pres‐ sure to the business," said Shane Obata, a portfolio manager at Middlefiel­d Group in Toronto. "And what I mean by that is the con‐ stant drive for profitabil­ity or else be punished by the market."

WATCH | Obata explains what AI firms see in Red‐ dit's data:

The company's 100,000 subreddits, which are dedi‐ cated to niche interests and communitie­s, are ripe for what's called contextual ad‐ vertising - a camping gear ad‐ vertiser might choose to target users in the r/camping subreddit, for example, per the S-1 - rather than behav‐ ioural advertisin­g, which tar‐ gets users based on personal data.

"That should allow for very high efficiency targeting [in] the sense that they're al‐ ready interested and often‐ times they're going to have a high purchase intent," said Obata.

Amid the IPO announce‐ ment, Reddit is also looking to generate revenue from other sources beyond adver‐ tising. The social media plat‐ form reportedly struck a con‐ tent licensing deal with Google, which would allow the tech giant to use Reddit's data to train its artificial intel‐ ligence models.

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