Why I'm Buying More Shares of The Trade Desk

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Despite reporting 50% revenue growth and a customer retention rate above 95%, shares of digital advertising company The Trade Desk (NASDAQ: TTD) traded down as much as 8% following its third quarter earnings report. The sell-off appears to have been fueled by fears of slowing growth in global advertising spend and a broader market sell-off among high-growth tech companies. Notwithstanding its stock's recent volatility, The Trade Desk's omni-channel revenue growth, international expansion, and its newest series of products lay the foundation for a successful 2019 and beyond.

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IMAGE SOURCE: THE TRADE DESK

Growing in all the right ways

The Trade Desk's ability to diversify its revenue has positioned it for sustainable growth. Seven years ago, The Trade Desk had a problem: 100% of its revenue came from traditional TV advertising. Throughout the past decade, traditional TV viewership has been in decline as consumers, particularly young adults, have increasingly decided to "cut the cord," leading to a decline in cable subscription rates. That scenario could have spelled disaster for The Trade Desk. Thankfully, The Trade Desk has been able to diversify its revenue streams in recent years, reducing its dependence on traditional TV advertising. Today, The Trade Desk's revenue is much more diverse, which provides optionality if one specific channel begins to suffer. The Trade Desk divides its revenue into five broad channels:

  1. Mobile advertising spend grew 65% year-over-year in the most recent quarter and now accounts for 45% of total revenue. Just seven years ago, mobile wasn't even a revenue channel for The Trade Desk Mobile should continue to grow as advertisers diversify away from relying so heavily on the platform-specific advertising offered by Facebook, Alphabet, and Amazon to reach the rest of the internet.

  2. Traditional TV is now less than 30% of revenue and growing at roughly 20% year-over-year. Management expects traditional tv to continue shrinking as a percentage of overall revenue due to continued declines in viewership and cable subscriptions and the company's strategy of focusing on faster growing channels.

  3. Connected tv or internet tv is one of the company's newest and most important channels. The Trade Desk does not break out connected tv as a percentage of total revenue, but growth has been very strong. In the fourth-quarter of 2017, Connected tv inventory grew by 1000% year-over-year. Then in first-quarter 2018, CTV spend increased 2100% year-over. Last quarter, CTV spend was up 10X year-over-year, which was "the most bullish number we've ever shared" according to Trade Desk CEO Jeff Green.

  4. Audio spend grew at 200% year-over-year and management believes audio to be "one of the most on-sale portions of advertising today."

  5. Data spend, which allows customers to gain additional insights such as cross-device analytics on The Trade Desk's platform, grew by over 70% year-over-year and is likely to be a catalyst going forward as companies continue to leverage The Trade Desk's over 9 million ad impressions per second to optimize ROI with data-driven insights.