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  1. SimpleSimon665 on

    R&D, in this case, is probably all of the IT and software support to keep one of the worlds largest websites and apps online 24/7.

  2. For some reason I read d&d and clicked because I wanted to see how that was possible

  3. For a company like Reddit, thatโ€™s just cost of employing developers. Almost everything developers work on is considered r&d so they can stuff that line item

  4. Maybe they should have spent some of that money buying Apollo app or their devs.

    Itโ€™s insane how amazing that app was vs the reddit one.

  5. Reddit gets a lot of hate but as an investment I think itโ€™s intriguing. High revenue growth, lots of great answers to questions that Google and now AI heavily uses, users come back repeatedly and it accomplishes something the video platforms donโ€™t quite address in terms of community interest rather than pure influencer interest (so itโ€™s used along with those platforms instead of being cannibalized). ย 

    Iโ€™ve seen some data that shows itโ€™s very successful at converting ads to sales too. ย With all the active human interaction Iโ€™d have to think they could integrate AI better.

  6. R&D is often treated like a catch-all category for operational debt in accounting. If you create a budget for a project and then that project goes over budget you can classify that excess cost as “R&D”. It makes the debt look less bad to investors. “We didn’t blow the budget, we were investing in development!” As a tech-based company, Reddit is very likely doing research and development, but who knows what all is also getting dumped into that designation.

  7. PE 190. Schwab equity rating of F. It has done well since the initial offering if you held it through from the beginning though.

  8. their stock based compensation numbers were pretty out of hand on the last ER call