Key Takeaways
- Q4 2025 revenue reached $846.8 million, representing 14.3% year-over-year expansion and surpassing projections by 0.6%
- Adjusted EBITDA of $400.3 million exceeded analyst forecasts by 6.4%
- Management’s Q1 2026 revenue outlook of $678 million fell 1.5% short of Wall Street targets, suggesting approximately 10% growth
- Shares declined 15.6% to $21.41 following the earnings announcement, continuing a challenging start to 2026
- An interim CFO currently leads financial operations while headwinds persist in CPG and automotive industries
The Trade Desk delivered Q4 2025 revenue of $846.8 million, marking a 14.3% increase from the year-ago period. The result exceeded Wall Street’s projection of $841.9 million by 0.6%.
Adjusted EBITDA reached $400.3 million, significantly above the $376.4 million analysts anticipated. Operating margin climbed to 30.3%, rising from 26.4% during the comparable quarter last year.
Adjusted EPS of $0.59 aligned with consensus forecasts, while free cash flow margin grew to 33.3% from 21% in the previous quarter.
The strong quarterly performance couldn’t prevent a 15.6% decline to $21.41 in after-hours trading. The forward-looking outlook drove the selloff.
Management projected Q1 2026 revenue to reach “at least” $678 million, landing approximately 1.5% beneath analyst expectations of $688.1 million. This forecast suggests about 10% year-over-year expansion, a meaningful deceleration from Q4’s 14% rate.
The profitability picture appears even more challenging. The Trade Desk forecasts Q1 2026 adjusted EBITDA around $195 million, trailing the $208 million delivered in Q1 2025. This guidance points to year-over-year declines in both revenue acceleration and profitability metrics.
CEO Jeff Green acknowledged the company operates “against a backdrop of macro uncertainty,” highlighting challenges within the consumer packaged goods and automotive sectors. These two verticals combine to represent over 25% of total company revenue.
Revenue Acceleration Continues Downward Trajectory
The slowdown has progressed steadily over recent quarters. Revenue expansion measured 25% in Q1 2025, followed by 19% in Q2, 18% in Q3, and most recently 14% in Q4. The pattern shows clear momentum loss.
For comparison, Meta Platforms achieved 24% year-over-year Q4 revenue growth within the same macroeconomic conditions and provided Q1 2026 guidance indicating roughly 30% growth. This contrast raises questions about TTD’s competitive positioning.
Looking at longer timeframes, The Trade Desk has expanded revenue at a 28.2% compounded annual rate over five years, outpacing typical software companies. However, the two-year annualized rate has moderated to 22%, with sell-side analysts projecting 15.6% growth over the coming 12 months.
On a brighter note, the company’s customer acquisition cost payback period stands at just 5.5 months, demonstrating robust product differentiation.
CFO Transition Compounds Investor Worries
The company currently relies on an interim CFO after another recent change in the position. The search for a permanent finance chief remains active.
While CFO transitions alone don’t necessarily indicate fundamental problems, the timing compounds existing investor concerns — decelerating growth, underwhelming guidance, and macro pressures across important verticals.
The Trade Desk’s AI platform Koa and the planned migration to company-owned data centers represent investments management believes will enhance future results. These initiatives carry near-term cost implications.
Following the post-earnings decline, TTD shares around $21 value the company at approximately 23 times GAAP earnings, after the business expanded EPS 15% year over year to $0.90 in 2025.
The stock has retreated substantially from its 52-week peak of $91.45.
Q1 2026 projections calling for at least $678 million in revenue and $195 million in adjusted EBITDA reflect management’s current expectations as communicated during the February 25 earnings discussion.

