Should You Forget Trump Media and Buy These 2 Tech Stocks Instead?

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Trump Media & Technology Group (NASDAQ: DJT), the parent company of Truth Social, has taken investors on a wild ride since it went public by merging with a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) on March 26, 2024. Its stock opened at $70.90, sank to an all-time low of $12.15 on Sept. 23, and now trades at about $33.

In 2023, Trump Media generated just $4.1 million in revenue while racking up a net loss of $58.2 million. In the first nine months of 2024, it only generated $2.6 million in revenue as its net loss widened to a whopping $363 million. With an enterprise value of $5.44 billion, its stock trades at 1,322 times last year's revenue -- so it's a meme stock that is mainly being propped up by the news cycle as it relates to President-elect Donald Trump instead of operating a sustainable business model.

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Image source: Getty Images.

Unlike other social media companies, Trump Media doesn't disclose its number of active users, ad impressions, or average revenue per user. So there are very few financial metrics available to analyze the health of the business. It's getting ready to launch its own streaming video platform, but that's a notoriously expensive market to break into.

So instead of chasing Trump Media's wild short-term swings and hoping it somehow scales up its business, investors with a long-term mindset should simply buy two more reliable social media stocks instead: Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META) and Pinterest (NYSE: PINS).

The social media leader: Meta Platforms

Meta is the world's largest social media company. It served 3.29 billion daily active people across its entire family of apps (Facebook, Instagram, Messenger, and WhatsApp) in its latest quarter. That represented 5% user growth from a year earlier. In 2023, Meta's revenue and earnings per share (EPS) grew 16% and 73%, respectively. In 2024, analysts expect its revenue to rise 21% and 52%, respectively.

That acceleration was mainly driven by a warmer macroeconomic environment, the expansion of its Reels short video platform, and more ad spending from Chinese e-commerce and gaming companies. The robust growth of its high-margin advertising business, which accounted for 98% of its revenue last year, offset the persistent losses at its Reality Labs division which produces its virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) products.

Meta has been ramping up its near-term spending on its cloud infrastructure, artificial intelligence (AI), and Reality Labs segments, but it still generated enough cash to buy back $30.1 billion in shares and pay out $3.8 billion in dividends in the first nine months of 2024.