Snapchat gains users but continues to lose money

Snapchat gains users but continues to lose money

Shares tumble 16% as ad revenue struggles persist, despite a base of 850 million monthly users.

Snap’s generative AI-powered Snapchat+ service reached 11 million subscribers, an increase from 7 million at the end of 2023. (AP pic)
LOS ANGELES:
Snap shares plunged more than 16% on Thursday when a disappointing financial outlook eclipsed a rise in users of the image-centric social network Snapchat.

California-based Snap said its loss in the recently-ended quarter shrank to US$249 million from US$377 million in the same period a year earler, while revenue grew to US$1.2 billion from US$1 billion.

Snap touted hitting a milestone of more than 850 million monthly users in the quarter.

“We continued to scale our advertising platform with active advertisers more than doubling year-over-year,” Snap chief executive Evan Spiegel said in an earnings release.

Investors appeared to focus on Snap’s forecast that revenue would grow 12% to 16% in the current quarter, expecting more from the social network’s ad platform.

Snap shares were down more than 16% to US$10.73 in after-market trades.

In recent years, the company has been challenged to compete for ad revenue against Meta’s Instagram, Google-owned YouTube and TikTok.

After its launch in 2011, Snapchat became a hit, particularly with young smartphone users, by letting people share photos or videos in messages that self-destruct after being viewed.

It also innovated with the use of filters for shared content, but an expansion into hardware such as drones and eyeglasses failed to gain traction.

Snap’s generative artificial intelligence (AI)-powered Snapchat+ service now has 11 million subscribers, up from 7 million at the end of 2023, according to the company.

“We continue to invest in Generative AI models and automation for the creation of ML and AI Lenses,” Snap said in the earnings release.

Early this year, Snap let go ten percent of its staff, saying it was “reorganising our team to reduce hierarchy and promote in-person collaboration.”

Its full year loss for 2023 was US$1.4 billion.

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