Cathie Wood Goes Bargain Hunting: 3 Stocks She Just Bought

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Cathie Wood is struggling to get the balance right in her growth stock portfolios. The Ark Invest co-founder, CEO, and chief investment officer is losing to the market for the third time in the last four years. She's trying not to keep it that way.

Wood offers up the daily transactions across her half-dozen exchange-traded funds. What's she buying these days? Ark Invest added to existing positions in Ibotta (NYSE: IBTA), Roblox (NYSE: RBLX), and Guardant Health (NASDAQ: GH) on Thursday. Let's take a closer look.

1. Ibotta

There's no shortage of market debutantes this year that have faltered after the initial spark. Ibotta is the latest of the sinker stinkers. The digital marketing platform that rewards its growing user base for making purchases through its advertising partners went public at $88 in April, only to open at $117 on its first day of trading. It's all been downhill from there. The stock has gone on to shed more than half of its opening high, closing below $50 on Thursday.

Ibotta became a broken initial public offering (IPO) at the end of May after disappointing the market with its first financial update as a public company. The first quarter itself was fine. Revenue rose 43%, shy of the 52% growth it posted for all of last year but still ahead of analyst expectations. Earnings also topped Wall Street profit targets. However, guidance called for a more substantial top-line slowdown for the second quarter. This is a hard sell for an IPO.

A couple pushing a huge piggy bank up a steep incline.
Image source: Getty Images.

Ibotta has an intriguing business model. It offers a cash-back rewards program in which users of the free namesake app make money when they purchase -- in person or online -- from an Ibotta retail partner. Walmart (NYSE: WMT) is a partner as well as a minority shareholder in Ibotta.

As bad as the market reaction to the first report was, this month's second-quarter announcement was even worse. Revenue growth slowed to 14%, or 29% adjusted for a prior-year breakage benefit. This is actually better than the adjusted 25% increase it was targeting three months earlier, but adjusted net income rose by a mere 9%.

Making matters worse, guidance for the current quarter calls for adjusted revenue growth to decelerate to 12%. It's not a good trend. The stock plummeted 27% on its heaviest daily volume since the day it went public following the uninspiring report.

The platform is working. Ibotta has now reached more than 50 million accounts and has paid back more than $2 billion in rebates since its inception. One can argue that it may even be a recession-resilient play. If consumers are pinched, they're going to want to save money whenever they can. For retail partners, it's a great way to generate a lead and only have to pay when a sale is made.