Reddit cites r/WallStreetBets as a risk factor in its IPO filing::As Reddit finally files to go public, the company wrote in its S-1 filing that “meme stock” schemes on r/WallStreetBets could pose a risk to investors.

  • @Nopulseoflife
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    854 months ago

    Reddit has never been profitable so I’d say that’s the biggest risk.

    • @snooggums@midwest.social
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      314 months ago

      Wall Street doesn’t care about profitability, they only care about growth.

      They should be worried about how much of their ‘growth’ is bots.

      • @DrCake@lemmy.world
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        214 months ago

        They care now that interest rates have increased. That’s kinda what the whole “enshitification” and layoffs are all about. Tech companies desperately scrambling to make a profit.

      • @dragontamer@lemmy.world
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        184 months ago

        Profitability is beginning to matter more. 5.25% Federal Funds rate, and a Prime-Rate of like 8.5%, means that it costs 8.5% for businesses to borrow money now.

        So that means that if a business borrows at 8.5%, they must grow by 8.5% to just stay even with interest rates and the cost of borrowing money. Because a lot of these “growth” strategies involve losing money for years-and-years, you have to factor in the costs of those losses as well.


        When Federal Funds Rate was 0.25%, no one cared about the cost of money or the cost of loans. Today, Wall Street cares, and you can see it in all the stock movements. The less-profitable companies have been getting hammered.

      • @Bye@lemmy.world
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        64 months ago

        Nope that was true when interest rates were low.

        Now they care about the bottom line.

        It can change again.

    • @silverbax@lemmy.world
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      244 months ago

      It’s only not profitable because the CEO and CFO are taking such massive salaries, $193M and $93M, respectively.

      They took $286M and the company lost $90M. They could take $90M less - still taking almost $200M - and Reddit would be profitable. That alone should tell investors that this is a bad investment.

      • KingPyrox
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        4 months ago

        That’s not exactly correct. The CEO & CFO are paid a salary way less, like I think around the $300k range. The $285M is in stock options, which only has a value based on the price of the stock. They could hand them back to the company but they would be of no value to the company until the IPO.

        • @Th3D3k0y@lemmy.world
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          84 months ago

          I’m confused how they could be paid in stock options when they aren’t traded. Do they just use made up numbers until this point and get “paid” in exposurebucks?

          • KingPyrox
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            134 months ago

            Even if a stock isn’t publicly traded it still has value. It’s just that retail investors can’t buy or sell it. Basically, it’s owning a part of the company. So they now technically own whatever percentage (number of shares/total number shares available). Unfortunately, it doesn’t equate to a monetary value to the company itself just show’s the company who owns what percentage of it.

            So well the company is “valued” at what it is now, they are only saying that if they were to sell all those shares in the open market that would be what it’s worth. Now in the business world the CEO & CFO will be able to go get loans based on that value (putting that stock as colaterial) but it’s basically all that they’d be able to get right now.

          • JackbyDev
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            34 months ago

            Basically, yes. It’s like paper money the company can print more of and dilute the value of.

          • KingPyrox
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            44 months ago

            Right, but that’s nowhere near the money to be able to make the company break even.

    • @jeffw@lemmy.world
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      64 months ago

      In risk management terms, lack of profit isn’t a risk. That’s more so an outcome.