Home Commerce Criteo Reports Flattish Q2 Earnings And Looks To Improve Its Total ‘Activated Media Spend’

Criteo Reports Flattish Q2 Earnings And Looks To Improve Its Total ‘Activated Media Spend’

SHARE:
Comic: Shopper Marketing Data

Criteo’s Q2 earnings report on Wednesday was marked by flatness.

Total revenue for the quarter inched up to $483 million, a 2% bump from the same time last year. At the same time, Criteo’s net income in Q2 – as in, real profit – dropped from $28 million to $23 million.

The company’s share price, after a brief initial spike, was flat over the course of the day.

Criteo has a compelling growth story, a strong base of retailer partners and a retail media business that’s growing at a double-digit rate. But investors are waiting to see whether Criteo’s total activated media spend improves.

That metric, which Criteo defines as all spend on behalf of retail media and performance advertisers, has hovered at around $1 billion for the past four quarters, noted Arete Research analyst Richard Kramer on the call.

“Growing activated media spend really is a top priority,” responded Criteo CEO Michael Komasinski.

The sunny side

Yet Criteo’s retargeting and ad tech services businesses – the former core revenue driver and still almost half of revenue – are flat or declining. That’s because many retailers, merchants and big brands have in-housed those services.

However, Criteo does have a few growth engines.

One is its retailer network. Investors were shaken three months ago when Criteo’s earnings were down in part because two flagship clients, Uber and Roundel, which is the Target ads business, have reduced their work with Criteo.

At the time, Criteo execs on the call disclosed that the company had 225 retail partners on its roster. This quarter, Wells Fargo analyst Alec Brondolo wanted to know whether that number had declined any further.

“We don’t keep updating that number,” CFO Sarah Glickman said, but she did share that Criteo now partners with more than 230 retailers.

Criteo is having particular success with agency business growth.

Last month, Criteo announced a strategic partnership with Dentsu to integrate its commerce media product. It should be noted, however, that until very recently Komasinski, who joined Criteo in January, was CEO of Dentsu North America – so take that one with a grain of salt.

But Criteo struck another noteworthy deal. Earlier this week, so not included in its Q2 reckoning, it announced an integration with WPP Media, this one focused primarily on CTV and streaming video.

Agencies now account for 38% of Criteo’s retail media advertising segment, which is its fastest-growing channel, up from 30% a year ago, Glickman said.

The not so good

But now it’s time for the sad trombone.

In terms of negative impacts by sector, “we certainly see CPG being down just broadly depending on the category,” Glickman said.

And did you catch that mention earlier about how retargeting and ad tech services are the former core of Criteo’s business? Both are on a slow path of decline.

“There has been a little bit of a drag from our ad tech services units,” Komasinski said.

Glickman added that the ad tech services segment was down by “double-digit millions” year over year. “That was due to self-preferencing by the largest ad tech player,” she said.

That’s one way to say “Google” without saying “Google.”

Must Read

AdExchanger Senior Editors Anthony Vargas and Alyssa Boyle.

POSSIBLE 2026: AdExchanger's Hot Takes

AdExchanger Senior Editors Alyssa Boyle and Anthony Vargas share their takeaways from three days chatting about agentic AI at POSSIBLE.

Reddit Reports A 75% Boost In Q1 Ad Revenue As It Reaches For 100 Million Daily US Users

Generative AI search has pushed traffic off a cliff across most of the internet, but not on social platforms. Reddit included.

POSSIBLE 2026: Can AI Help Agencies Finally Break Down Those Silos?

Domenic Venuto, indie agency Horizon Media’s chief product and data officer, sat down with AdExchanger during POSSIBLE at the Fontainebleau in Miami to unpack the role of AI in today’s media and advertising landscape.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

Google Touts Its AI Ad Tech Adoption And New AI Max Features

Google announced new features and ad types for AI Max, its AI-based bidding product for search and shopping or sponsored product ads. The company also touted “hundreds of thousands” of advertisers using AI Max.

Hand pressing blue AI button on keyboard. Digital collage of artificial intelligence interface.

Meta’s Ad Machine Is Purring, So Why Did Its Stock Drop?

Meta’s Q1 call sounded like an AI and hardware pitch, but under the hood it was still about one thing: investing in AI to squeeze more money out of its ads business.

Alphabet Exceeds $100 Billion In Q1 And Its Profits Almost Doubled

Alphabet earned $109.9 billion in Q1 this year, up from $90.2 billion a year ago. And that’s not even the truly gobsmacking number.