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|    Message 27,061 of 27,547    |
|    Biden Economy to All    |
|    Woke Snap shares plunge 30% in the wake     |
|    06 Feb 24 23:01:57    |
      XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.society.liberalism, alt.los-angeles       XPost: alt.politics.democrats, talk.politics.guns       From: remailer@domain.invalid              Shares of Snapchat parent Snap plunged on Tuesday after the company       reported a loss in the final three months of 2023.              Snap reported a net loss of $248 million for the December quarter,       an improvement from the same period in the prior year and a narrower       loss than Wall Street analysts had expected. Still, shares fell       around 30% in after-hours trading Tuesday.              The company also said revenue from the quarter grew 5% year-over-       year to $1.36 billion, its second consecutive quarter of revenue       gains after two earlier quarters of declines last year.              However, in a Tuesday letter to investors, Snap said the conflict in       the Middle East posted a “headwind to year-over-year growth of       approximately 2 percentage points in Q4.”              CEO Evan Spiegel attempted to strike an optimistic tone in the       company’s earnings release, saying, “2023 was a pivotal year for       Snap, as we transformed our advertising business and continued to       expand our global community, reaching 414 million daily active       users.”              But the report comes one day after the company announced it would       lay off 10% of its staff, cutting around 500 jobs. The reductions       signal that the company is still in cost-cutting mode after the       company in 2022 laid off what was then 20% of its workforce, around       1,200 employees, and another 3% of its staff last year.              Snap said Monday that the layoffs were meant to “best position our       business to execute on our highest priorities” and to “promote in-       person” work.              “Based on these numbers, yesterday’s layoffs appear more than       necessary as the company will need to rethink its strategy,       particularly in terms of monetization,” Thomas Monteiro, senior       analyst at Investing.com, said in emailed commentary following the       report.              Investors may be especially disappointed by Snap’s Tuesday results       in the light of rival platform Meta’s 200% year-over-year profit       growth for the same period, reported last week, which indicated an       improvement in the larger digital advertising market, Monteiro said.              “Snap has failed to show the market its ability to capitalize on       resilient ad spending across different parts of the economy,” he       said.              Snap has been working to improve its advertising technology and       offerings, following changes Apple’s made to its app tracking       policies in 2021 that delivered a hit to the business models of       Snapchat, Facebook and other platforms.              Spiegel touted the success of Snap’s ad-targeting efforts on Snap’s       earnings call on Tuesday, saying the company had seen the number of       small and medium-sized advertisers grow 20% year-over-year.              “I do think we’re making significant progress and we’re optimistic       that we can continue to accelerate,” Spiegel said.              Snapchat in November announced a deal with Amazon that would let       Snapchat users click on Amazon ads on the app, shop and check out,       all without leaving the platform. The tool appeared to be a bid to       more readily compete with the e-commerce offerings of rivals like       Instagram and TikTok and to make Snapchat more attractive to       advertisers.              Snap on Tuesday also announced that its Snapchat+ subscription       program — a key effort to diversify its revenue — now has more than       7 million subscribers, up from the 5 million it reported in the       fall.              The company also reported strong user growth. Daily active users       grew 10% year-over-year in the December quarter to 414 million, with       gains largely coming from outside the US and Europe. However,       average revenue per user globally dipped 5% from the year-ago       quarter.              In the current quarter, Snap said it expects daily active users to       continue to grow from the December quarter to 420 million. The       company is projecting year-over-year revenue growth of between 11%       and 15% for the first three months of 2024.              Tuesday’s report also comes as Snap attempts to revamp its public       image and distance itself from social media peers like Meta and       TikTok that have faced regulatory scrutiny and safety concerns.              Snap on Friday launched a new brand campaign with the tagline “Less       Social Media. More Snapchat” that aims to highlight its focus on       private, personal conversations rather than passive consumption of       content promoted by an algorithm.              Snapchat does have a feed called Spotlight where users can scroll       through algorithmically sorted, short-form videos. But the company       says its core mission is helping people to communicate with friends.              Days before the campaign’s launch, Spiegel appeared to testify       alongside other tech leaders in a Senate hearing focused on the       platforms’ safety measures for young users. During the hearing,       Spiegel apologized to parents whose children had died after       purchasing drugs on Snapchat.                     [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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