Digiday Daily
June 03, 2026
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Tariffs dented Temu’s U.S. opportunity. Its ad spending has followed.

The Chinese e-commerce giant slashed its U.S. ad spend across nearly every major social media platform in 2026, according to data from Sensor Tower. It went from being X’s single largest advertiser between January to May 2025, to the 51st largest in the same time period this year, reducing by eight figures — or a 95% year-over-year slump — per the data.

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TOP STORY

Marketing on Platforms
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Tariffs forced Temu to slash its U.S. ad spend on nearly every platform

The Chinese e-commerce giant traded upper-funnel reach for high-intent shoppers — and still grew its user base.

OTHER THINGS TO KNOW

A MESSAGE FROM BASIS

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Why unified, AI-driven advertising is becoming essential

MEDIA & PLATFORMS

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Future of TV Briefing: How TV-streaming ad sellers are pitching fluidity in this year’s upfront market

This week’s Future of TV Briefing looks at how AMC Global Media, Disney, Paramount, TelevisaUnivision and Warner Bros. Discovery are combining their linear TV and streaming inventory for ad sales.

Zero-click Future
The case for and against publishers buying paid traffic 

For many audience development teams, the question is no longer whether to buy traffic, but how far they can push it.

PARTNER INSIGHTS FROM APPSFLYER

Why mobile’s measurement playbook is the answer to web fragmentation

MARKETING

Experimental Channels
Why DSW and other brands are pivoting back to 'old' marketing tactics

Amid AI and digital saturation, DSW is shifting ad spend to real-life activations and traditional media to deepen customer connections.

Evolving Agencies
Overheard: Revisiting the K2 Report on media agency practices like rebates and principal media

The good news: more marketers have updated their media agency contr