Earnings Results: Trade Desk posts upbeat earnings in tough ad climate, but its stock moves lower

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Advertising-technology company Trade Desk Inc. sailed past quarterly earnings expectations Wednesday, but its shares were moving lower in the extended session.

Trade Desk
TTD,
-5.12%

logged second-quarter net income of $33 million, or 7 cents a share, whereas it posted a net loss of $19 million, or 4 cents a share, in the year-prior quarter.

The company recorded adjusted earnings per share of 28 cents, compared with 20 cents in the year-earlier period. Analysts tracked by FactSet were expecting 26 cents.

Revenue increased to $464 million from $377 million, whereas analysts were projecting $455 million.

Don’t miss: Trade Desk nabs Nasdaq-100 index inclusion

The second quarter “marked another quarter of outstanding execution and share gains for the Trade Desk,” Chief Executive Jeff Green said in a release. “With advances in areas such as [connected TV], retail and identity, we are helping the world’s largest brands buy media on the open internet with more precision and transparency than ever.”

Still, Trade Desk shares were off about 6% in Wednesday’s after-hours trading.

“While results in the quarter were solidly above guidance, based on our conversations, they fell short of buy-side expectations given the stock’s recent momentum,” RBC Capital Markets analyst Matthew Swanson said in a note to clients.

For the third quarter, Trade Desk expects at least $485 million in revenue, while analysts were anticipating $481 million. The company also models $185 million in adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, whereas analysts had been looking for $183 million.

Trade Desk results come as large advertising agencies have sent cautious signals this earnings season. Streaming company Roku Inc.
ROKU,
-5.66%
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meanwhile, blew past revenue expectations for its own second quarter but signaled a challenging spending landscape for media and entertainment advertisers.

See also: Ad agency WPP cuts sales outlook over caution from U.S. technology companies

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