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Mac's avatar

I was looking into TTD in early February but got hung up with the CEO offloading a substantial chunk of stock all the way up until the day before the company was set to announce that they missed revenue projections for the first time ever. The stock subsequently declined over 30% and a class action lawsuit was filed on 2/19/25. The suit is still pending a motion to dismiss from TTD last I checked. There’s also the bizarre circumstances surrounding the ongoing CFO turnover saga, which maybe isn’t a big deal alone but combined with the fortuitously timed stock sale raises a red flag for me. Went back and forth on this a lot though because if there’s no there there then the stock is definitely undervalued.

James Emanuel's avatar

You say: "I will just note that a CEO buying $150m of stock and getting almost 1m options granted at the same time is about as much of a “call your bottom” trade as I can imagine."

Another interpretation may be that he wanted to send a signal that he was buying in the open market, but in reality, the free options along side the purchase provides him with a relatively large margin of safety — he isn't buying at open market prices at all when the transactions are taken together. In aggregate he is gaining exposure to ~$175m worth of stock for the price of $150m (he's paying 86 cents on the dollar).

He also probably suspected that the insider buy, and all the publicity it would generate, would pump the stock and also cause a short squeeze (and he was correct), so it was almost like a free money deal, taking candy from a baby.

Perhaps he has been watching the way Elon Musk pumps the value of his stock and learned a trick or two.

Just playing devil's advocate. Not saying I am correct, just presenting an alternative perspective to be considered.

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