New York, June 8, 2026, 16:02 EDT
- Snap shares ended 2.1% lower at $5.64, not catching the broader tech bounce.
- The drop followed Friday’s 5.1% slide and S&P Global’s recent credit upgrade.
- Investors continue to look at improved cash flow while also watching ad-market pressure, cost cuts, and spending on Snap’s Specs.
Snap Inc. stock dropped Monday while tech stocks across the U.S. moved higher. Investors kept up the pressure on the Snapchat parent, even after the company reported stronger cash generation and got a credit-rating upgrade.
Shares finished 2.1% lower at $5.64 on the NYSE. Around 35.9 million shares changed hands. The stock moved between $5.50 and $5.78 for the day.
Snap lagged as tech shares bounced. The Nasdaq Composite ended up 1.27%, and the S&P 500 added 0.63%, with buyers stepping back into areas hit in Friday’s drop.
Soon after big tech sank, “Today looks like a day where investors are doing a little bit of bargain hunting off the big tech selloff,” Rick Meckler, partner at Cherry Lane Investments, told Reuters. But Snap didn’t catch any buyers. Reuters
Snap lagged some other digital-ad stocks. Pinterest was up late in the session. Meta Platforms and Alphabet also fell, but their losses were less than Snap’s. That keeps attention on how smaller ad names track the bigger firms, with ad spend still sticking to the largest platforms.
Snap shares fell 5.1% to finish at $5.76 on Friday, erasing the bump from its $6.07 close on Thursday. The drop comes after a tough end to last week.
Snap’s latest operating update last month put some numbers behind the bull case. Revenue for the first quarter was up 12% at $1.53 billion. Net loss improved, down to $89 million. Free cash flow came in at $286 million. Adjusted EBITDA, which cuts out interest, tax, depreciation, amortization and some other costs, rose sharply to $233 million, more than double the year-ago number.
CEO Evan Spiegel said in Q1 Snap saw daily active user growth, faster revenue growth, wider margins, and strong free cash flow. He also said the company will keep its focus on “disciplined execution” and keep investing in Specs, Snap’s smart eyewear push. Snap Inc. Investor Relations
Snap picked up an upgrade last week, as S&P Global Ratings lifted its issuer credit rating to BB- from B+. The agency cited lower leverage, stronger free operating cash flow to debt, revenue growth forecasts and Snap’s cost-savings plan. The outlook is positive.
The risk now is that cost cuts and an improved debt profile don’t fix Snap’s core challenge: can it build a lasting ad business, and still pay for products like Specs. Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, told Reuters in April, “Cutting costs may appease an activist in the near term,” but said Snap still has to show it has a defensible business model. Reuters
Wall Street isn’t jumping into recovery mode yet. The stock holds a consensus “Hold” rating and a 12-month price target of $7.63, according to StockAnalysis data. That’s above Monday’s close, but still falls short of a strong endorsement. StockAnalysis
Snap’s stock is handling the tough questions for now. The company has improved its cash flow, but investors still want to know if that will hold up against choppy ad results, hard-hitting rivals like Meta, Alphabet and Pinterest, and ongoing spend on hardware that hasn’t scaled up.