#1 26/03/2024 12h44
- InvestisseurHeureux
- Admin (2009)
Top 5 Année 2024
Top 5 Année 2023
Top 5 Année 2022
Top 10 Portefeuille
Top 5 Dvpt perso.
Top 10 Expatriation
Top 5 Vivre rentier
Top 5 Actions/Bourse
Top 50 Obligs/Fonds EUR
Top 5 Monétaire
Top 5 Invest. Exotiques
Top 10 Crypto-actifs
Top 5 Entreprendre
Top 5 Finance/Économie
Top 5 Banque/Fiscalité
Top 5 SIIC/REIT
Top 20 SCPI/OPCI
Top 50 Immobilier locatif - Réputation : 4018
Hall of Fame
“INTJ”
$9,5 Md de capitalisation pour un "super forum" qui perd de l’argent depuis deux décennies.
BusinessInsider a écrit :
Reddit is going public with a time-tested business model pioneered by the likes of Facebook and Twitter: Get people to give you content, for free, and sell ads on that content.
So why is it losing so much money?
Last year, according to Reddit’s newly filed IPO documents, the company generated $804 million in revenue and lost nearly $91 million. That’s better than the year before, when it lost $159 million on revenue of $667 million.
But it’s still a lot of money to lose selling a free product. Right?
It’s not unusual for tech companies to lose money as they’re going public. And when they do, the rationale is usually that these are young, fast-growing businesses, and investors are getting a chance to get in early.
But Reddit is no baby: It started nearly two decades ago, in 2005. Condé Nast, the magazine giant, bought it in 2006 and spun it out as a stand-alone company in 2011.
Reddit kind of anticipates this critique in its investor docs, and argues that it didn’t really start operating as a serious business until 2018 when it finally started "meaningful monetization efforts" — that is, trying to make money for real.
En ligne