Reddit shares rise 7%, hit record as Raymond James raises price target

Technology

Reddit CEO Steve Huffman stands on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) after ringing a bell on the floor setting the share price at $47 in its initial public offering (IPO) on March 21, 2024 in New York City.
Spencer Platt | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Reddit shares rose over 7% to a record high Tuesday after Raymond James analysts raised their price target and reiterated their “strong buy” rating for the social media platform.

The company’s shares reached $191 during midday trading, topping a previous high of $182 on Jan. 6. Reddit shares passed $100 for the first time in late October after the company reported third-quarter financial results that beat Wall Street expectations.

Raymond James analysts said in a Tuesday note that they would raise their Reddit price target to $200 from $150, largely due to their “conviction” that Reddit can expand its business internationally.

The company is planning to attract more users outside its core U.S. market as it looks to expand its advertising business, Reddit Chief Operating Officer Jen Wong told CNBC in November. Reddit’s third-quarter sales, which are predominantly online advertising, rose 68% year-over-year to $348.4 million.

Reddit’s increase use of artificial intelligence to automatically translate its site text to different languages like Portuguese, French, Spanish, Philippines and German “should help improve local search rankings for Reddit and provide durable hypergrowth,” the Raymond James analysts wrote.

The company’s AI-translation efforts are key to its international expansion, Wong told CNBC in November. Reddit’s fastest-growing regions in regards to users include the U.K., the Philippines, India and Brazil, she said.

“That points to a lot of our future user growth opportunity definitely outside of the U.S. and local language,” Wong said. “Every language is an opportunity for another Reddit.”

The company also continues to be one of the top five most searched websites, the Raymond James analysts said, citing the SimilarWeb research firm. Reddit’s “authentic and uniquely moderated (community system) content” will help the company stay on top of search results, ultimately resulting in more Reddit users creating accounts, the analysts wrote.

Reddit makes more money on logged-in users who have accounts rather than logged-out users, who have been visiting the platform more often over the past year due to internal site improvements and a previous Google search algorithm change that favored “authentic” content.

The Raymond James analysts noted in a section on “risks” that Reddit could suffer from “unfavorable Google search algo updates” that push the site lower in search results and slower rates in converting those logged-out users into the more financially lucrative logged-in counterparts.

Watch: Steven Mnuchin on TikTok: We’d be very interested in investing the business

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