Snap shares climbed 15% on Wednesday after the company issued its third-quarter earnings, reporting revenue that beat analysts expectations and a $500 million stock repurchase program.
Here is how the company did compared with Wall Street’s expectations:
Earnings per share: Loss of 6 cents. That figure is not comparable to analysts’ estimates.
Revenue: $1.51 billion vs. $1.49 billion expected, according to LSEG
Global daily active users: 477 million vs. 476 million expected, according to StreetAccount
Global average revenue per user (ARPU): $3.16 vs. $3.13 expected, according to StreetAccount
Snap also announced that it is partnering with the startup Perplexity AI, which “will integrate its conversational search directly into Snapchat.” The feature is set to appear in Snapchat starting in early 2026, Snap said.
“Perplexity will pay Snap $400 million over one year, through a combination of cash and equity, as we achieve global rollout,” Snap said in the letter. “Revenue from the partnership is expected to begin contributing in 2026.”
The partnership represents “a first step in Snap’s effort to make Snapchat a platform where leading AI companies can connect with its global community in creative and trusted ways,” the two companies said in their announcement.
In the company’s earnings call, Snap CEO Evan Spiegel said Perplexity will have “default placement in our chat inbox” and the startup will “control the responses from their chatbot inside of Snapchat.”
Although Snap will not be selling “advertising against the Perplexity responses,” Spiegel said that the integration “will help Perplexity drive additional subscribers, which I think is something that will be valuable to their business.”
“We have a really unique opportunity ahead to help distribute AI agents through our chat interface,” Spiegel said.
While Snapchat users will still be able to engage with the company’s My AI chatbot, the integrated Perplexity AI service will provide them with “real-time answers from credible sources and explore new topics within the app,” the companies said.
Regarding Snap’s expensive foray into developing augmented reality glasses, Spiegel said the company plans to create a separate subsidiary around the Specs AR glasses to speed up development with partners.
Snap said fourth-quarter sales will come in between $1.68 billion and $1.71 billion. That figure’s midpoint of $1.695 billion is slightly ahead of Wall Street expectations of $1.69 billion.
For the third quarter, Snap said sales grew 10% year over year while it logged a net loss of $104 million. During the same quarter last year, Snap recorded a net loss of $153 million.
The Snapchat parent said that third-quarter adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or EBITDA, came in at $182 million, ahead of the $125 million that StreetAccount was projecting.
The company also said that its adjusted EBITDA for the fourth quarter will be between $280 million and $310 million, which tops StreetAccount’s projections of $255.4 million.
Snap shares were down 32% for the year, as of Wednesday’s close, compared to the Nasdaq’s 22% gain.
Although the company’s shares soared as high as 25% in after-hours trading on Wednesday, they began their descent after Snap finance chief Derek Andersen detailed some of the company’s sales-related challenges on the earnings call.
“The North America LCS segment remains the primary headwind to our overall revenue growth,” said Andersen, adding that the company is seeing more growth and demand for Snap’s ad products from small-to-medium sized businesses in other regions.
In a letter to investors, Snap said that government regulations like Australia’s social media minimum age bill and related policy developments “are likely to have negative impacts on user engagement metrics that we cannot currently predict.”
“While we remain committed to our goal of serving 1 billion global monthly active users, we expect overall DAU may decline in Q4 given these internal and external factors, and as noted above we expect particularly negative impacts in certain jurisdictions,” Snap said in the letter.
The Australian senate passed the bill in November 2024, and when the law comes into effect next month, companies like Facebook and Instagram parent Meta, TikTok and Snap will be penalized if they fail to adequately prevent children under 16 from possessing accounts on their respective platforms.
Snap also said in the investor letter that the “upcoming rollout of platform-level age verification” from companies like Apple and Google could also negatively impact user metrics in the future.
Utah and California have signed online-child safety bills that put the onus on app store makers to verify user ages. Utah’s law is set to fully take effect in May 2026.
“We are also preparing for the upcoming rollout of platform-level age verification, which will use new signals provided by Apple — and soon Google — to help us better determine the age of our users and remove those we learn are under 13,” Snap said in the letter.
Snap’s warning to investors underscores how new laws, policies and regulations around the globe are beginning to impact tech firms.
In the letter, Snap also said that some of its efforts to improve monetization, such as its Snapchat+ subscription service, could result in “adverse impact on engagement metrics as these experiences are rolled out globally.”
Pinterest shares tanked on Tuesday after the company reported third-quarter results that missed on earnings per share and provided weaker-than-expected guidance. The company’s finance chief Julia Donnelly told analysts that Pinterest expects “broader trends and market uncertainty continuing with the addition of a new tariff in Q4 impacting the home furnishing category.”
Alphabet said that its total advertising revenue for the third quarter rose 13% year-over-year to $74.18 billion, while YouTube’s online ad sales climbed 15% to $10.26 billion.
Reddit said last Thursday that third-quarter sales surged 68% year-over-year to $585 million. The company’s global daily active uniques increased 19% year-over-year to 116 million, surpassing estimates of 114 million.
A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Oct. 30, 2025 in New York.
Angela Weiss | AFP | Getty Images
This week’s equity market wobble, which saw a retreat in U.S. artificial intelligence-related stocks amid ongoing concerns over stretched valuations, has thrust contagion fears into the spotlight for global investors.
Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon warned this week of a “likely” 10-20% drawdown in equity markets at some point within the next two years, while the International Monetary Fund and the Bank of England have both sounded the alarm bells.
Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey highlighted the possibilities of an AI bubble in an interview with CNBC on Thursday, noting that the “very positive productivity contribution” from technology companies could be offset by uncertainty around future earning steams in the sector.
“We have to be very alert to these risks,” Bailey said.
Legrand is one of several European companies which is benefitting from the AI boom. The French company, which sells products to Alphabet, Amazon and others to help cool servers, has seen its shares surge 37% this year, roughly as much as Nvidia.
Anders Danielsson, CEO of Swedish construction group Skanska, which builds data centers and other AI infrastructure assets, shrugged off concerns about a slowdown.
“In the U.S. we have a very strong pipeline of data centers — we don’t see any slowdown there,” he told CNBC. “We are working with large international customers and they are also interested in building data centers in central Europe, and in the Nordics and the U.K. We haven’t seen any slowdown really.”
Meanwhile Kiran Ganesh, multi-asset strategist at UBS, highlighted a notable lack of volatility, adding that the broader narrative remains positive.
“We’ve had a remarkably smooth rally given the scale of investment that’s taken place, given the uncertainty about future cash flows, and given some of those concerns about valuation,” Ganesh told CNBC’s “Europe Early Edition” on Friday.
“As we’ve gone through earnings season, I think it’s reasonable to have expected some volatility, but actually when we look at the results, and they have been reassuring, we’re still up over the course of earnings season and they have been beating expectations. So although some volatility has been materializing this week, we think that’s to be expected and the bigger picture still remains positive.”
Still, many investors appear to be souring on the increasingly-stretched valuations.
In Asia, shares of SoftBank Group — which is active across AI infrastructure, semiconductor and application companies — have fallen sharply, with the Japanese group suffering almost $50 billion in weekly losses. SoftBank resumed its downward trajectory on Friday, after dropping about 10% on Wednesday.
On Tuesday, it emerged that Scion Asset Management, the hedge fund led by “The Big Short” investor Michael Burry, had built short positions against both Palantir Technologies and Nvidia, drawing the ire of Palantir CEO Alex Karp.
“Some big tech stocks are on sale, and are presenting buying opportunities for investors, especially for investors who have missed out on the market’s strength over the past two months,” said Glen Smith, chief investment officer at GDS Wealth Management.
Other investors have flagged concentration risk in U.S. equities, and advocate looking further afield.
Luca Paolini, chief strategist at Pictet Asset Management, said stretched valuations mean the firm is neutral on U.S. names. “Emerging markets are preferred, with diversified exposure across India, Brazil, and broader EM benefiting from AI-driven investment and monetary easing,” Paolini said in a market commentary.
With valuations in the U.S. stock market becoming increasingly stretched, the chief executive of Southeast Asia’s largest bank is warning investors to expect turbulence ahead.
“We’ve seen a lot of volatility in the markets. It could be equities, it could be rates, it could be foreign exchange,” DBS CEO Tan Su Shan told CNBC, adding that she expects that volatility to continue.
Tan, who took over the helm of DBS from longtime CEO Piyush Gupta in March, said that investors were particularly worried about the lofty valuations of artificial intelligence stocks, especially the so-called “Magnificent Seven.”
The Magnificent Seven — Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla — are some of the major U.S. tech and growth stocks that have driven much of Wall Street’s gains in recent years.
“You’ve got trillions of dollars tied up in seven stocks, for example. So it’s inevitable, with that kind of concentration, that there will be a worry about. ‘You know, when will this bubble burst?'”
Earlier this week, at the Global Financial Leaders’ Investment Summit in Hong Kong, it was likely there would be a 10%-20% drawdown over the next 12 to 24 months.
Morgan Stanley CEO Ted Pick said at the same summit that investors should welcome periodic pullbacks, calling them healthy developments rather than signs of crisis.
Tan agreed. “Frankly, a correction will be healthy,” she said.
Tan advised investors to diversify rather than concentrate holdings in one market. “Whether it’s in your portfolio, in your supply chain, or in your demand distribution, just diversify.”
Tan, who has over 35 years of experience in banking and wealth management, noted that Asia could attract more investment from the U.S.—and that it’s not a bad thing.
Singling out Singapore and the country’s central bank’s efforts to boost interest in the local markets, Tan described the city-state as a “diversifier market.”
“We’ve got rule of law. We’re a transparent, open financial system and stable politically. We’re a good place to invest…. So I don’t think we’re a bad place to think about diversifying your investments.”
Tesla CEO Elon Musk attends the Saudi-U.S. Investment Forum, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 13, 2025.
Hamad I Mohammed | Reuters
Tesla CEO Elon Musk says the company will likely need to build a “gigantic” semiconductor fabrication plant to keep up with its artificial intelligence and robotics ambitions.
“One of the things I’m trying to figure out is — how do we make enough chips?” Musk said at Tesla’s annual shareholders meeting Thursday.
“But even when we extrapolate the best-case scenario for chip production from our suppliers, it’s still not enough,” he said.
Tesla would probably need to build a “gigantic” chip fab, which Musk described as a “Tesla terra fab.” “I can’t see any other way to get to the volume of chips that we’re looking for.”
Microchips are the brains that power almost all modern technologies, including everything from consumer electronics like smartphones to massive data centers, and demand for them has been surging amid the AI boom.
Tech giants, including Tesla, have been clamoring for more supply from chipmakers like TSMC — the world’s largest and most advanced chipmaker.
According to Musk, Tesla’s potential fab’s initial capacity would reach 100,000 wafer starts per month and eventually scale up to 1 million. In the semiconductor industry, wafer starts per month is a measure of how many new chips a fab produces each month.
For comparison, TSMC says its annual wafer production capacity reached 17 million in 2024, or around 1.42 million wafer starts per month.
While Tesla doesn’t yet manufacture its own microchips, the company has been designing custom chips for autonomous driving for several years.
It is currently outsourcing production of its latest-generation “AI5” chip, which Musk said will be cheaper, power-efficient, and optimized for Tesla’s AI software.
The CEO also announced on Thursday that Tesla will begin producing its Cybercab — an autonomous electric vehicle with no pedals or steering wheel — in April.
Musk’s statements underscore Tesla’s shift into AI and robotics — industries the CEO sees as the future of the global economy.
“With AI and robotics, you can actually increase the global economy by a factor of 10, or maybe 100. There’s not, like, an obvious limit,” Musk said at the shareholder meeting.