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Snap Stock Price Slides After EU Child-Safety Probe Hits Snapchat Parent
27 March 2026
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Snap Stock Price Slides After EU Child-Safety Probe Hits Snapchat Parent

NEW YORK, March 27, 2026, 9:05 AM EDT

Snap dropped 10.7% on Thursday to $4.01, with the move coming after the European Union announced a formal probe into Snapchat. Regulators are looking into whether the platform does enough to shield minors and block illegal or age-restricted products.

That shift lands as another regulatory risk enters the mix, with investors already marking down social-media shares over youth-safety and platform issues. Meta shares slid 7% Thursday, while Alphabet dropped 2.8% after U.S. verdicts highlighted legal exposures related to harm among younger users.

The case falls under the Digital Services Act, the EU’s framework for policing big online platforms. EU officials in Brussels say they’re scrutinizing Snapchat’s methods for age verification, how minors’ accounts are set by default, its moderation systems and whether users can still run into posts pushing drugs, vapes, or alcohol. Any breaches carry potential fines of up to 6% of Snap’s worldwide annual revenue. Snap says it’s cooperating with the Commission and intends to stay engaged in good faith as the probe continues.

Awkward timing here. Back in February, Snap posted a 10% jump in fourth-quarter revenue, hitting $1.72 billion. Snapchat+ subscribers shot up 71% to 24 million. Management pointed to early gains from slashing costs and diversifying revenue. “Our Q4 results began to reflect the impact of our strategic pivot toward profitable growth,” CEO Evan Spiegel said. Snap Inc.

Still, Wall Street remained tough on the company. “The ads platform (of Snap) still has a long way to go in attracting big budgets from enterprise advertisers,” eMarketer analyst Max Willens told Reuters after the results, pointing out the distance between Snap and bigger players like Meta and Alphabet. Reuters

The sector took another hit Thursday, this time with a Los Angeles jury ruling Meta and Google negligent in a social-media harm lawsuit. Snap and TikTok, for their part, settled with the plaintiff before things got to trial. D.A. Davidson’s Gil Luria weighed in, noting the decision could end up pushing new consumer protections that “may dampen growth.” Reuters

The downside risk isn’t limited to a single EU case anymore. Snap has landed among platforms hit with thousands of lawsuits in the U.S., where the focus is shifting to claims that design decisions hurt teens. Legal experts told Reuters that plaintiffs are zeroing in on product design instead of just user posts, putting new pressure on Section 230—the shield that usually protects platforms from being held liable for user content.

The focus has shifted: talk of subscriptions, ad tech and margins has given way to concerns about compliance spending, product restrictions and looming lawsuits. Snap can still make the case that its growth strategy is gaining traction, but investors are reacting more sharply to legal and regulatory overhang at this point.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors. Follow Khadija Saeed on Google News.

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