Snap CEO Evan Spiegel speaks during the Semafor World Economy Summit 2025 at Conrad Washington in Washington, D.C., on April 23, 2025.
Kayla Bartkowski | Getty Images
Snap reported better-than-expected first-quarter revenue Tuesday but declined to provide guidance, citing macroeconomic uncertainties that could weigh on advertising demand.
Shares dropped 13% in after-hours trading.
Here is how the company did compared with Wall Street’s expectations:
Earnings per share: Loss of 8 cents. That figure is not comparable to analysts’ estimates.
Revenue: $1.36 billion vs. $1.35 billion expected, according to LSEG
Global daily active users: 460 million vs. 459 million expected, according to StreetAccount
Global average revenue per user: $2.96 vs. $2.93 expected, according to StreetAccount
Snap did not offer an outlook for the second quarter, citing uncertainties surrounding “how macro economic conditions may evolve in the months ahead, and how this may impact advertising demand more broadly.”
Analysts had expected $1.39 billion in second-quarter revenue guidance. The company said it expects daily active users to come in near the midpoint of its second-quarter range at 468 million.
“While our topline revenue has continued to grow, we have experienced headwinds to start the current quarter, and we believe it is prudent to continue to balance our level of investment with realized revenue growth,” the company said in a letter to investors.
Like many tech companies, Snap is facing a turbulent macro setup as it grapples with President Donald Trump’s evolving trade plans. Many fear that global trade uncertainty might lead companies to lower guidance or pull back spending this earnings season.
Snap’s cited potential constraints on advertising demand as the reason for holding off on guidance. Ad revenues for the period rose 9% year over year to $1.21 billion. That growth came mainly from direct response advertising. The company also said that brand-oriented advertising revenue dipped 3% from a year ago.
The company isn’t alone. Last Thursday, Alphabet reported first-quarter sales of $90.23 billion, which surpassed Wall Street expectations, but executives told analysts that the company may experience headwinds to its online ad business in the Asia-Pacific region.
Snap lowered its full-year adjusted operating expenses range to between $2.65 billion and $2.70 billion, down from $2.70 billion to $2.75 billion. The company also revised its full-year cost guidance for stock based compensation downward to between $1.13 billion and $1.16 billion from $1.15 billion to $1.20 billion.
Sales in Snap’s first quarter jumped 14% to $1.36 billion from $1.19 billion in the year-ago period. The company reported a net loss of about $140 million, or 8 cents per share. That narrowed 54% from about $305 million, or 19 cents, in the year-ago period. Adjusted EBITDA came in at $108 million, topping a $64 million estimate from StreetAccount.
The company attributed the 8 cents loss to a $70.1 million charge related to cash severance, stock-based compensation expenses and other costs associated with a 2024 restructuring. “These charges are not reflective of underlying trends in our business,” the company said.
Snap posted 460 million daily active users during the period, up from 453 million the previous quarter. The company also said that it reached 900 million monthly active users, up from 850 million in August, the last time Snap provided that stat.
Meta reports its latest earnings on Wednesday, followed by Reddit on Thursday and Pinterest on May 8.
A silicon wafer with chips etched into is seen as U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris tours a site where Applied Materials plans to build a research facility, in Sunnyvale, California, U.S., May 22, 2023.
Pool | Reuters
The U.S. will increase tariffs on Chinese semiconductor imports in June 2027, at a rate to be determined at least a month in advance, the Trump administration said in a Federal Register filing on Tuesday.
But in the meantime, the initial tariff rate on semiconductor imports from China will be zero for 18 months, according to the filing from the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative.
As part of an investigation that kicked off a year ago, the agency found that China is engaging in unfair trade practices in the industry.
“For decades, China has targeted the semiconductor industry for dominance and has employed increasingly aggressive and sweeping non-market policies and practices in pursuing dominance of the sector,” the office said in the filing.
The decision to delay new tariffs for at least 18 months signals that the Trump administration is seeking to cool any trade hostilities between the U.S. and China.
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Additional tariffs could also become a bargaining chip if future talks break down.
U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping reached a truce in the so-called trade war in October, as part of a deal that included the U.S. slashing some tariffs and China allowing exports of rare earth metals.
The USTR’s Tuesday filing states that tariffs will increase on June 23, 2027.
The notice is the next step in a process focusing on older chips that started during the Biden administration under Section 301 of the Trade Act.
The new 2027 date gives clarity to American firms that have said they are closely watching how U.S. tariffs could affect their businesses or supply chains.
The tariffs are separate from other duties threatened by the Trump administration on Chinese chip imports under Section 232 of the law.
Every weekday the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer holds a “Morning Meeting” livestream at 10:20 a.m. ET. Here’s a recap of Tuesday’s key moments. 1. Stocks were little changed as bond yields rose after a strong third-quarter GDP reading dampened expectations for future Fed interest rate cuts. However, Jim Cramer said the market is not right because once President Donald Trump gets his Fed chief in place, they will be at Trump’s behest to cut rates. The president has made no secret that he wants rates way lower. He’s been pressuring current Fed Chair Jerome Powell , who has not buckled. Powell’s term, however, is up in May. Jim said that regardless of one’s own personal views of the president, lower rates help stocks. 2. Jim talked about the Club adding Alphabet back to our Bullpen stocks to watch list . Jim has acknowledged repeatedly that it was a mistake to exit the stock in late March. But he stressed that he does not want to continue to make a second mistake by not buying it back. “People must be open-minded,” he said. Stocks in the Bullpen are names we are considering buying. Jim said he had to change his view on Alphabet because conditions changed. The antitrust overhang he was concerned with has subsided, and worries about AI were put to rest with the launch of Gemini 3. 3. Shares of Nvidia opened lower Tuesday morning, and Jim said the stock “should not be down.” He argued that the monolithic nature of the AI trade lumps all kinds of unrelated stocks and industries from quantum to crypto to rockets in with Nvidia. That’s plain wrong. Nvidia shares turned modestly higher later in the session. In his Sunday column , Jim argued that five prevailing bear cases against Nvidia are nonsense. Many investors think that a hardware company just shouldn’t be the biggest company, and Nvidia stock should be lower. Why do they say that? Jim said Tuesday, “It’s because they want it down.” Next year, Nvidia’s next-generation Vera Rubin chip platform will be all anyone talks about. He warned that “people who sold Nvidia off the competition are going to once again be as wrong as they have been since I first recommended the stock in 2009.” 4. Stocks covered in Tuesday’s rapid fire at the end of the video were: Prologis , ServiceNow , Johnson & Johnson , Reddit , and Tyson Foods . (Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust is long NVDA. See here for a full list of the stocks.) As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust’s portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB. NO SPECIFIC OUTCOME OR PROFIT IS GUARANTEED.
Former Facebook Chief Privacy Officer Chris Kelly said Tuesday that the next phase of the artificial intelligence boom will focus on becoming more efficient.
As major AI players race to churn out the infrastructure needed to support AI workloads, Kelly told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” that the industry will need to streamline these power-intensive buildouts.
“We run our brains on 20 watts. We don’t need gigawatt power centers to reason,” Kelly said. “I think that finding efficiency is going to be one of the key things that the big AI players look to.”
Kelly, who was also general counsel at Facebook, added that the companies able to reach a breakthrough in lowering data center costs will emerge as AI winners.
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The data center market has accumulated over $61 billion in infrastructure dealmaking in 2025 as hyperscalers have rushed into a global construction craze, according to S&P Global.
OpenAI alone has made over $1.4 trillion in AI commitments over the next several years, including massive partnerships with GPU leader Nvidia and infrastructure giants Oracle and Coreweave.
But the data center frenzy has garnered growing concerns about where the power to support these buildouts is coming from, with an already strained electric grid.
Nvidia and OpenAI announced in September a project that included at least 10 gigawatts of data centers, which is roughly the equivalent of the annual power consumption of 8 million U.S. households.
Ten gigawatts is also around the same amount of power as New York City’s peak summer demand in 2024, according to the New York Independent System Operator.
Cost concerns were further fueled after DeepSeek launched a free, open-source large language model in December 2024 for under $6 million, the company claimed, significantly lower than U.S. competitors.
Kelly said he expects to see “a number of Chinese players come to the fore,” especially following President Donald Trump’s recent decision to approve the sale of Nvidia’s H200 chips to the country.
Open-source models, especially out of China, will provide people access to “basic levels of compute” and generative and agentic AI, Kelly added.