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Reddit plans share sales to platform’s users as it moves ahead with IPO

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Reddit plans share sales to platform’s users as it moves ahead with IPO

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Reddit revealed more than $800mn in sales and narrowing losses as it unveiled a prospectus ahead of its long-delayed initial public offering, outlining plans to allot a portion of its shares to retail investors and users of its social network.

The first major tech group flotation of 2024 will test the strength of the US IPO market after two lacklustre years. Under the ticker RDDT, the company is poised to list on the New York Stock Exchange as soon as early March.

The number of shares sold to retail and Reddit users would be “significant”, the company said.

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“We hope going public will provide meaningful benefits to our community as well,” Steve Huffman, co-founder and chief executive, said in the prospectus. “Our users have a deep sense of ownership over the communities they create on Reddit. This sense of ownership often extends to all of Reddit.” 

Reddit was valued at $10bn in its most recent private fundraising in 2021, but some investors have since marked down their valuations by about 50 per cent.

San Francisco-based Reddit reported sales of $804mn in 2023, according to the prospectus, up 21 per cent year on year. The company, once known as a bastion for free speech, makes most of its revenue from advertising, forcing it in recent years to more closely police the shadier underbelly of the platform. Net losses shrunk from $159mn to $91mn in 2023, but it has never reported a profit.

The platform said it had 267.5mn weekly active users across more than 100,000 subreddits, or individual topic and interest-based forums, the most famous of which was the WallStreetBets trading forum. 

Reddit said it would use a “directed share programme” to allocate shares to longtime users — or “redditors” — and will also sell stock to the broader retail investment community through apps such as Robinhood and SoFi.

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The company cautioned that involving an unusually large number of retail traders in the listing could lead to an increase in stock price volatility, and risked replicating the sort of “meme stock” price action that led to a brief jump in Robinhood’s stock shortly after its listing in 2021.

“High levels of initial interest . . . may result in an unsustainable market price, in which case the market price of our class A common stock may decline over time,” the prospectus noted. 

Huffman holds restricted stock that would vest if Reddit attains a $5bn market capitalisation after the offering, according to the filing. People close to the situation said previously that it was aiming to achieve an initial valuation of at least $5bn when it goes public.

Reddit is battling the dominant Silicon Valley giants such Meta and Google for marketing dollars as the advertising market recovers from its recent slump.

Beyond advertising, Reddit is seeking to diversify its revenues, for example by charging third parties to access its data which was previously free. Separately on Thursday, it announced that it had struck a deal with Google which would “usher in new ways for Reddit content to be displayed across Google products” while allowing the search engine to use Reddit posts to train its artificial intelligence models. On Wednesday, Reuters reported that the deal was worth about $60mn annually.

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Reddit is also seeking to generate revenue by formalising some of the marketplaces that have emerged on the network, such as subreddits where users pay each other for Photoshop requests or sell sneakers.

Entities affiliated with Sam Altman, chief executive of artificial intelligence group OpenAI, beneficially own more than 5 per cent of the outstanding capital stock, ahead of the debut, according to the prospectus. Altman was, at the time of the 2021 financing, a member of Reddit’s board of directors, the filing said. 

Reddit first filed a confidential version of its prospectus more than two years ago, but its listing plans were derailed as rising interest rates and falling tech valuations caused most new listing activity to freeze.

Activity has been picking up in recent months, however, as investors grow increasingly confident that rates have peaked, and stock indices notch new record highs.

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Trump administration sends letter wiping out addiction, mental health grants

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Trump administration sends letter wiping out addiction, mental health grants

A demonstrator holds a sign during International Overdose Awareness Day on Aug. 28, 2024 in New York City.

Erik McGregor/LightRocket via Getty Images


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Erik McGregor/LightRocket via Getty Images

The Trump administration sent shockwaves through the U.S. mental health and drug addiction system late Tuesday, sending hundreds of termination letters, effective immediately, for federal grants supporting health services.

Three sources said they believe total cuts to nonprofit groups, many providing street-level care to people experiencing addiction, homelessness and mental illness, could reach roughly $2 billion. NPR wasn’t able to independently confirm the scale of the grant cancellation. The U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMSHA) didn’t respond to a request for clarification.

“We are definitely looking at severe loss of front-line capacity,” said Andrew Kessler, head of Slingshot Solutions, a consultancy firm that works with mental health and addiction groups nationwide. “[Programs] may have to shut their doors tomorrow.”

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Kessler said he has reviewed numerous grant termination letters from “Salt Lake City to El Paso to Detroit, all over the country.”

Ryan Hampton, the founder of Mobilize Recovery, a national advocacy nonprofit for people in and seeking recovery, told NPR his group lost roughly $500,000 “overnight.”

“Waking up to nearly $2 billion in grant cancellations means front-line providers are forced to cease overdose prevention, naloxone distribution, and peer recovery services immediately, leaving our communities defenseless against a raging crisis,” Hampton said. “This cruelty will be measured in lives lost, as recovery centers shutter and the safety net we built is slashed overnight. We are witnessing the dismantling of our recovery infrastructure in real-time, and the administration will have blood on its hands for every preventable death that follows.”

Copies of the letter sent to two different organizations and reviewed by NPR signal that SAMHSA officials no longer believe the defunded programs align with the Trump administration’s priorities.

The letter points to efforts to reshape the national health system in part by restructuring SAMHSA’s grant program, which “includes terminating some of its … awards.”

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According to the letter, grants are terminated as of Jan.13, adding that “costs resulting from financial obligations incurred after termination are not allowable.”

The National Association of County Behavioral Health and Developmental Disability Directors sent a letter to members saying it believes “over 2,000 grants [nationwide] with a total of more than $2 billion” are affected. The group said it’s still working to understand the “full scope” of the cuts.

This move comes on top of deep Medicaid cuts, passed last year by the Republican-controlled Congress, which affect numerous mental health and addiction care providers.

Kessler told NPR he’s hearing alarm from care providers nationwide that the safety net for people experiencing an addiction or mental health crisis could unravel.

“In the short term, there’s going to be severe damage. We’re going to have to scramble,” he said.

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Regina LaBelle, a Georgetown University professor who served as acting head of the Office of National Drug Control Policy during the Biden administration, said the SAMHSA grants pay for lifesaving services.

“From first responders to drug courts, continued federal funding quite literally save lives,” LaBelle said. “The overdose epidemic has been declared a public health emergency and overdose deaths are decreasing. This is no time to pull critical funding.”

Requests for comment from SAMHSA and the Department of Health and Human Services were not immediately returned.

This is a developing story.

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Video: Clashes With Federal Agents in Minneapolis Escalate

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Video: Clashes With Federal Agents in Minneapolis Escalate

new video loaded: Clashes With Federal Agents in Minneapolis Escalate

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Clashes With Federal Agents in Minneapolis Escalate

Fear and frustration among residents in Minneapolis have mounted as ICE and Border Patrol agents have deployed aggressive tactics and conducted arrests after the killing of Renee Good by an immigration officer last week.

“Open it. Last warning.” “Do you have an ID on you, ma’am?” “I don’t need an ID to walk around in — In my city. This is my city.” “OK. Do you have some ID then, please?” “I don’t need it.” “If not, we’re going to put you in the vehicle and we’re going to ID you.” “I am a U.S. citizen.” “All right. Can we see an ID, please?” “I am a U.S. citizen.”

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Fear and frustration among residents in Minneapolis have mounted as ICE and Border Patrol agents have deployed aggressive tactics and conducted arrests after the killing of Renee Good by an immigration officer last week.

By Jamie Leventhal and Jiawei Wang

January 13, 2026

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Lindsey Halligan argues she should still be U.S. attorney, accuses judge of abuse of power

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Lindsey Halligan argues she should still be U.S. attorney, accuses judge of abuse of power

Top Justice Department officials defended Lindsey Halligan’s attempts to remain in her position as a U.S. attorney in court filings Tuesday, responding to a federal judge who demanded to know why she was continuing to do so after another judge had found that her appointment was invalid.

The filing, signed by Halligan, Attorney General Pam Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, accused a Trump-appointed judge of “gross abuse of power,” and attempting to “coerce the Executive Branch into conformity.”

Last week, U.S. District Judge David Novak, who sits on the federal bench in Richmond, ordered Halligan to provide the basis for her repeated use of the title of U.S. attorney and explain why it “does not constitute a false or misleading statement.” 

Novak gave Halligan seven days to respond to his order and brief on why he “should not strike Ms. Halligan’s identification as United States attorney” after she listed herself on an indictment returned in the Eastern District of Virginia in December as a “United States attorney and special attorney.”

U.S. District Judge Cameron Currie had ruled in November that Halligan’s appointment as interim U.S. attorney was invalid and violated the Constitution’s Appointments Clause, and she dismissed the cases Halligan had brought against former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James. 

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The statute invoked by the Trump administration to appoint Halligan allows an interim U.S. attorney to serve for 120 days. After that, the interim U.S. attorney may be extended by the U.S. district court judges for the region. 

Currie found that the 120-day clock began when Halligan’s predecessor, Erik Siebert was initially appointed in January 2025. Currie concluded that when that timeframe expired, Bondi’s authority to appoint an interim U.S. attorney expired along with it. 

The judge ruled that Halligan had been serving unlawfully since Sept. 22 and concluded that “all actions flowing from Ms. Halligan’s defective appointment” had to be set aside. That included the Comey and James indictments.

In their response, Bondi, Blanche and Halligan called Novak’s move an “inquisition,” “insult,” and a “cudgel” against the executive branch. The Justice Department argued that Currie’s ruling in November applied only to the Comey and James cases and did not bar Halligan from calling herself U.S. attorney in other cases that she oversees. 

“Adding insult to error, [Novak’s order] posits that the United States’ continued assertion of its legal position that Ms. Halligan properly serves as the United States Attorney amounts to a factual misrepresentation that could trigger attorney discipline. The Court’s thinly veiled threat to use attorney discipline to cudgel the Executive Branch into conforming its legal position in all criminal prosecutions to the views of a single district judge is a gross abuse of power and an affront to the separation of powers,” the Justice Department wrote.

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In his earlier order, Novak said that Currie’s decision “remains binding precedent in this district and is not subject to being ignored.”

The Justice Department called Currie’s ruling “erroneous”: and said that Halligan is entitled to maintain her position “notwithstanding a single district judge’s contrary view.”

On Monday, the second-highest ranking federal prosecutor in the Eastern District of Virginia, Robert McBride, was fired after he refused to help lead the Justice Department’s prosecution of Comey, a source familiar with the matter told CBS News. McBride is a former longtime federal prosecutor in Kentucky’s Eastern District and had only been on the job as first assistant U.S. attorney for a few months after joining the office in the fall. 

Halligan is a former insurance lawyer who was a member of President Trump’s legal team, and joined Mr. Trump’s White House staff after he won a second term in 2024. In September, Halligan was selected to serve as interim U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia after her predecessor abruptly left the post amid concerns he would be forced out for failing to prosecute James.

Just days after she was appointed, Halligan sought and secured a two-count indictment against Comey alleging he lied to Congress during testimony in September 2020. James, the New York attorney general, was indicted on bank fraud charges in early October. Both pleaded not guilty and pursued several arguments to have their respective indictments dismissed, including the validity of Halligan’s appointment, and claims of vindictive prosecution.

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