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Prediction: The Trade Desk Will Beat the Market. Here's Why.

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I'm quite convinced that digital advertising expert The Trade Desk (NASDAQ: TTD) will beat the market.

I can't tell you exactly when, or by how much -- but this stock is surely heading for brighter days. It's not going to be an overnight success story, and The Trade Desk might keep lagging behind the broader market for a while. If so, I might come back and recommend buying it again, at even lower prices.

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So the road ahead looks bumpy and that's perfectly fine. In my eyes, The Trade Desk is a rock-solid idea for long-term investors.

And here's why.

The Trade Desk was recently too hot to handle

The Trade Desk used to be a market darling. The stock closed at $139.51 per share on Dec. 4, 2024. At that point, it had gained a market-crushing 156% in two years. Trading at nosebleed-inducing valuation multiples, The Trade Desk made even high-flying names like Nvidia and Celsius Holdings look cheap in comparison:

Stock

Price to Earnings (TTM)

Price to Earnings (Forward)

Price to Free Cash Flow (TTM)

The Trade Desk

229

85.1

134

Celsius Holdings

40.4

42.6

40.4

Nvidia

57.2

49.1

63.8

Data collected from YCharts. TTM = trailing 12 months.

But that was a peak, and things changed quickly from the lofty December perch. The Trade Desk's stock has fallen 65.4% as of April 22. Nvidia took a lighter 32.7% price correction while Celsius soared 30.3% higher. Market makers were still ready to embrace some high-priced stocks in this challenging period -- but not The Trade Desk's.

Chiefly, investors panicked about a fairly soft earnings report in February. The company missed its own revenue guidance target, and management suggested that the top-line growth could slow down even more in the next quarterly report.

"As a company, we take great pride in our ability to forecast accurately, and we take full ownership of the shortfall, CFO Laura Schenkein said on the fourth-quarter earnings call. "Importantly, this miss was not due to a lack of opportunity or increased competition. It was on us."

The management team outlined a concrete plan to address the recent shortcomings, but the damage was done. The Trade Desk's stock closed 33% lower the next day and the rout had begun.

Smart fixes, not panic buttons

Many companies would resort to cost-cutting in this situation. But the Q4 shortfall was a revenue issue, not an earnings miss. Expense controls can boost a sagging bottom line, but they aren't likely to help with soft sales growth.