Key Takeaways
- Q1 adjusted earnings per share reached $0.28, falling short of the $0.32 consensus; revenue hit $689M, surpassing projections
- The company’s Q2 revenue forecast of “at least” $750M came in below the Street’s $771M expectation
- Shares declined 15% during Friday’s premarket session to $20.14, bringing year-to-date losses to 38%
- KeyBanc reduced its rating to Sector Weight, pointing to underwhelming guidance and intensifying competition
- Both Oppenheimer and William Blair lowered their ratings, highlighting decelerating expansion and eroding market position
Shares of Trade Desk tumbled 15% during Friday’s premarket session to $20.14 following the ad technology firm’s release of mixed first-quarter performance metrics and forward-looking guidance that failed to satisfy investor expectations.
The company reported adjusted earnings per share of $0.28 for the first quarter, falling short of Wall Street’s $0.32 projection and declining from the prior year’s $0.33. Revenue climbed 12% year-over-year to $689 million, marginally exceeding the $678.9 million consensus forecast.
The modest revenue outperformance failed to alleviate investor anxiety regarding the company’s trajectory.
Looking ahead to the second quarter, Trade Desk projected revenue of “at least” $750 million. While this represents 8% growth, the figure fell considerably short of analyst expectations of $771 million. The discrepancy triggered immediate concern among market participants.
The stock has declined 38% during 2026 thus far and has lost 61% of its value over the trailing twelve months. The downward trajectory began in July 2025.
Chief Executive Jeff Green maintained an optimistic outlook in the company’s statement. “Despite headwinds in the macro environment, we remain confident in our ability to lead and innovate,” he commented.
Analysts Shift to Cautious Stance
The response from Wall Street research firms came quickly. KeyBanc moved its rating from Overweight to Sector Weight, identifying the underwhelming Q2 outlook as the catalyst. The investment bank highlighted three specific challenges: geopolitical instability in the Middle East, strained relationships with advertising agencies, and fundamental industry transformation.
According to KeyBanc, while the first two factors may prove temporary, the competitive landscape appears poised for persistent challenges. The firm anticipates TTD’s valuation will stabilize around a mid- to high-teens 2027 GAAP price-to-earnings multiple pending a return to stronger growth rates.
Oppenheimer similarly downgraded the stock to Perform from its previous Outperform designation, referencing a disappointing revenue trajectory and anticipation that second-quarter growth will register in the single digits.
William Blair transitioned to Market Perform from Outperform as well. The firm’s analysts highlighted intensifying competition and indicated Trade Desk has been experiencing market share erosion — a pattern they anticipate will persist.
The convergence of three rating reductions on a single trading day underscores the severity of investor concern.
Publicis Relationship Complicates Outlook
The quarterly results arrived during a particularly challenging period for Trade Desk’s partnerships with advertising agencies. During March, French advertising conglomerate Publicis disclosed to Barron’s that an independent third-party auditor determined Trade Desk failed to meet audit standards.
Publicis announced it would cease recommending Trade Desk as a preferred vendor to its client roster following this determination. The decision carries substantial implications considering the volume of advertising expenditure channeled through major agency holding companies.
KeyBanc explicitly identified strained agency relationships as among the persistent challenges confronting the organization.
Trade Desk’s first-quarter performance showed revenue of $689 million alongside adjusted earnings per share of $0.28, as disclosed in Thursday’s post-market earnings announcement.

