Today: 14 May 2026
Snap Stock Is Sliding Again: Why Wall Street Is Turning Cautious on SNAP
14 May 2026
2 mins read

Snap Stock Is Sliding Again: Why Wall Street Is Turning Cautious on SNAP

SANTA MONICA, May 14, 2026, 08:02 PDT

Snap Inc. dropped early Thursday, sliding 34 cents to $5.27, after a new analyst downgrade stoked fresh skepticism about the Snapchat owner’s ad rebound and whether recent cost trimming will actually lead to more reliable profits. Market cap sat around $8.9 billion.

This matters, especially with Wednesday’s rebound looking fragile from the start. Snap managed to close up 1.08% at $5.61 on May 13, snapping a two-day slide, but shares continued to trail the Nasdaq and stayed well off their 52-week high.

Freedom Broker downgraded Snap to Hold from Buy after a first-quarter showing that left analyst Saken Ismailov unimpressed, according to Investing.com. Ismailov flagged geopolitical drag on ad revenue and brand budget pullbacks. The downgrade landed after a stretch when Snap had already shelved its Perplexity partnership, trimmed staff, and set a reserved tone for Q2.

On paper, Snap’s first quarter wasn’t soft. Revenue hit $1.529 billion, a 12% jump from last year. Net loss came in at $89 million; adjusted EBITDA landed at $233 million. That figure, adjusted EBITDA, takes interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization, and some extra items out of the equation. CEO Evan Spiegel pointed to a “return to growth” for daily active users and highlighted strong free cash flow. Snap Inc. Investor Relations

The mix, though, looked murkier. Advertising revenue edged up just 3% to $1.24 billion, according to the filing, while other revenue—mostly subscriptions and related items—soared 87% to $285.3 million. Snap reported ad impressions climbing roughly 17%, but the cost per ad impression slipped about 12%. More ads, but pricing power still lagging.

Snap didn’t offer much relief with its own forecast. The company projected second-quarter revenue between $1.52 billion and $1.55 billion, factoring in zero contribution from Perplexity following the end of their partnership. Snap also flagged ongoing uncertainty around its Middle East operations. Adjusted EBITDA guidance landed at $175 million to $200 million, which trails first-quarter results.

Snap CFO Derek Andersen told analysts that the Q2 outlook factors in a full three months of Middle East turbulence, though gains in North America ad revenue are helping to cushion the blow. Andersen added, Snap is targeting over $500 million in annualized cost reductions in the back half of 2026.

No sugarcoating the landscape here. Snap’s still feeling pressure from both TikTok and Meta’s Instagram, Reuters said last week. Meanwhile, Meta, Pinterest, and Reddit all turned in solid first-quarter revenue numbers. Analysts point out that smaller ad players get hit harder when advertisers cut budgets and shift dollars over to giants like Meta and Google.

Snap’s latest 10-Q singles out Alphabet, ByteDance, Meta and Pinterest as competitors, warning that these bigger players could adapt faster to tech shifts, tweaks in products or changes in advertiser demand. The company also highlights tougher privacy restrictions and changes in mobile OS, which have complicated ad targeting and measurement—potentially steering advertisers toward the industry giants.

Cost cuts have taken center stage. Snap disclosed in its latest quarterly filing plans to slash its global workforce by roughly 16%, projecting pretax charges between $95 million and $130 million—most of that landing in the second quarter. During Q1, the company also bought back and retired 49.9 million Class A shares, spending $350.5 million. As of now, $400 million remains on its buyback program announced in February.

The trouble is, layoffs and share buybacks might not shore up Snap’s ad business quickly enough. According to the company, the bulk of advertisers haven’t signed on for long-term deals, so any pullback in spending, lackluster ad performance, new regulations, or even a dip in user engagement—all of it could spell trouble. Snap logged a net loss of $89 million for the quarter and its accumulated deficit now stands at $14.4 billion.

Investors are juggling two ideas right now: Snap says subscriptions, AI-driven ads, and Specs could expand its revenue streams, while also betting North American ad sales will steady up before cost-cutting measures take hold. Thursday’s session made it clear—Wall Street isn’t handing Snap much leeway for setbacks.

Stock Market Today

  • Best Stocks on Sale Now: MercadoLibre, Deckers Outdoor, Take-Two Interactive
    May 14, 2026, 1:52 PM EDT. MercadoLibre, Deckers Outdoor, and Take-Two Interactive present compelling buying opportunities amid recent stock pullbacks. MercadoLibre, a Latin American e-commerce and fintech leader, reported 49% revenue growth in Q1 but its shares are down 23% YTD, trading at a historic low price-to-sales ratio of 2.5. Deckers Outdoor, owner of UGG and Hoka, is down 8% this year despite posting record holiday revenue and 11% earnings growth. Hoka drives potential for global expansion. Take-Two Interactive, a key player in gaming, saw shares rise 6.45% recently, reflecting confidence in its long-term growth. These companies combine strong fundamentals and growth prospects, offering attractive entry points for patient investors.

Latest articles

PureCycle Stock Jumps 25% as New Jersey Approval Opens Door to Recycled Plastic Demand

PureCycle Stock Jumps 25% as New Jersey Approval Opens Door to Recycled Plastic Demand

14 May 2026
PureCycle Technologies shares rose 24.7% to $12.72 after New Jersey regulators granted its PureFive resin a one-year conditional designation as postconsumer recycled content under state packaging law. The company reported first-quarter revenue of $4.1 million and a net loss of $33.4 million. Production at its Ohio plant doubled from a year earlier. PureCycle plans to seek permanent approval from state regulators.
GTA 6 Preorder Rumor Sends Take-Two Stock Higher. The Bigger Test Comes Next Week

GTA 6 Preorder Rumor Sends Take-Two Stock Higher. The Bigger Test Comes Next Week

14 May 2026
Take-Two Interactive shares rose 6.5% to $241.68 on Thursday after reports of a leaked Best Buy affiliate campaign fueled speculation that Grand Theft Auto VI pre-orders could begin next week. Neither Take-Two nor Rockstar Games has confirmed a pre-order date. The company is set to report earnings after markets close on May 21. GTA VI is listed for release on Nov. 19, 2026, for PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S.
Mobix Labs Stock Jumps After Rare-Earth Deal Puts Defense Supplier in China Supply-Chain Fight

Mobix Labs Stock Jumps After Rare-Earth Deal Puts Defense Supplier in China Supply-Chain Fight

14 May 2026
Mobix Labs shares jumped 86% Thursday after announcing a non-binding letter of intent to acquire Special Project Delivery LLC, a private U.S. rare earths and critical minerals platform. The move comes as U.S. rules tighten on defense sourcing and Chinese exports of heavy rare earths remain sharply restricted. No purchase price was disclosed, and Mobix said a deal is not assured. SPD specializes in extracting rare earths from U.S. coal ash.
Lumen Stock Surges After $2.4 Billion Debt Move Puts AI Fiber Turnaround in Focus

Lumen Stock Surges After $2.4 Billion Debt Move Puts AI Fiber Turnaround in Focus

14 May 2026
Lumen Technologies shares rose 14% Thursday, trading at $10.76 after hitting $11.27, as investors reacted to its debt refinancing and AI-focused network expansion. Level 3 Financing refinanced secured loans, leaving $2.4 billion outstanding under a repriced facility. Lumen also announced a new fiber route between Seattle and Minneapolis, set for completion by end-2026. First-quarter revenue fell to $2.899 billion, with a $200 million net loss.
Citadel’s Hong Kong Quant Ultimatum Has Wall Street Watching Singapore, Miami And Data Risk
Previous Story

Citadel’s Hong Kong Quant Ultimatum Has Wall Street Watching Singapore, Miami And Data Risk

Tesla’s China Test: Musk’s Self-Driving Push Faces Its Biggest Gatekeeper
Next Story

Tesla’s China Test: Musk’s Self-Driving Push Faces Its Biggest Gatekeeper

Go toTop