NEW YORK, March 16, 2026, 17:52 EDT
Snap Inc. finished Monday’s session at $4.585, ticking up from Friday’s $4.56 close, after shares swung between $4.55 and $4.69 during the day. Despite the modest rise, the Snapchat parent remains barely clear of its 52-week low at $4.52. Yahoo Finance
This point isn’t lost on Snap, which is under pressure to show it can depend less on advertising. Back in February, the company reported direct revenue—basically, what it pulls in from subscribers and paid features—hitting a $1 billion annualized run rate. Subscriber numbers cleared 25 million, but daily active users slipped by 3 million from the prior quarter. Reuters
Tech stocks bounced back Monday, lifting the Nasdaq by 1.22%. Meta Platforms snapped up almost a 3% gain following a Reuters report about upcoming layoffs. Terry Sandven, chief equity strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management, pointed to upbeat headlines about tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz bolstering global stability. Reuters
Paid features are giving the stock a lift. TechCrunch pointed out that Snapchat+ is fueling most of Snap’s direct-revenue gains. The outlet also flagged Meta’s move to test paid offerings across Instagram, Facebook, and WhatsApp—a sign that subscriptions are turning into an industry-wide trend. TechCrunch
Ads remain the primary revenue engine. Snap’s fourth-quarter numbers topped revenue forecasts, with the company reporting a 28% jump in active advertisers. Still, the first-quarter sales outlook disappointed Wall Street. eMarketer analyst Max Willens called out the ads platform, saying it has “a long way to go” before it lands bigger enterprise dollars. Reuters
Snap is rolling out more creator tools aimed at locking in recurring monthly revenue. On Feb. 17, the company announced plans to start alpha testing creator subscriptions in the U.S. starting Feb. 23. With the new offering, fans get access to exclusive content, priority replies, and ad-free creator Stories. Snap Newsroom
The bear scenario isn’t limited to weak ad demand. Last week, Britain ordered Snap, Meta, TikTok and YouTube to prove by April 30 that they can block children from their platforms under the Online Safety Act. But according to Reuters on Monday, British teenagers were already pushing back against the idea of a ban similar to Australia’s. Reuters
Snap CEO Evan Spiegel isn’t mincing words, labeling Australia’s law “a massive experiment with high stakes.” His worry: teens may drift toward less-policed apps. For investors, it’s a double-edged sword. Stricter age checks might slow user growth, but slack oversight risks heavier regulation and fines. Snap Newsroom
Monday’s lift barely moved the needle. Snap is still hovering near its recent lows, with investors unconvinced—waiting for clear evidence that paid features, creator tools, and the latest ad formats are enough to counter ongoing pressure on the core business.
Next up: earnings that actually count for something, not just a quick rally. The stock sits in limbo for now—investors eager for a break, while the company still needs to prove its plan works.