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Snap (NYSE:SNAP) stock is down 7% on Thursday, heading toward $4.50 after opening at $4.90. That decline lands on the last trading session before Good Friday as the U.S. stock market is closed tomorrow.
The move adds fresh pain to what has already been a brutal stretch for Snap’s loyal investors. Alarmingly, SNAP shares are down 43% year to date and 48% over the past year.
Two compounding headwinds are driving today’s pressure. Specifically, an activist investor is publicly demanding a strategic overhaul of Snap, and a widening wave of child safety lawsuits and regulatory scrutiny continues to weigh on sentiment.
Irenic Capital Turns Up the Heat
On March 31, activist firm Irenic Capital Management sent a letter to Snap CEO Evan Spiegel titled “Snap Back to Reality: Save Snap Now.” Irenic holds 2.5% of Snap’s Class A shares and is pushing for cost reductions, share repurchases, an AI-driven overhaul of ad monetization, and divesting or shuttering the Specs smart-glasses division.
Irenic estimates the Specs division has consumed over $3.5 billion and argues that Snap could be worth at least $26.37 per share, or $35 billion, if those changes are implemented. That’s a wide gap from where the stock trades today. Irenic’s demands are specific and pointed, but there’s a structural ceiling on how much pressure the firm can actually apply: Snap’s founders retain significant voting power, limiting Irenic’s direct influence.
Snap has implemented some measures to boost performance, but investors appear skeptical about the pace of change. The activist campaign adds a layer of urgency to a turnaround story that’s been slow to materialize.
Child Safety Scrutiny Keeps Piling Up
The legal and regulatory front is equally uncomfortable. The New Mexico Attorney General filed a lawsuit alleging Snap’s platform facilitates child sexual exploitation, and the Portnoy Law Firm launched an investigation into Snap for possible securities fraud tied to the stock’s decline and related regulatory events. These aren’t isolated incidents.
63 victim families have filed Snapchat fentanyl lawsuits, alleging minors purchased fentanyl-laced pills through the platform. Most victims were aged 14 to 22. U.S. representatives introduced the Cooper Davis and Devin Norring Act to combat illicit drug sales on social media, naming the legislation after two teenagers who allegedly died from fentanyl-laced pills purchased via Snapchat.
Snap also settled a social media mental health bellwether trial just days before it was set to begin. That settlement resolves only a handful of cases. Over 1,000 other coordinated cases remain pending, keeping legal costs elevated and reputational pressure firmly in place.
The Bull Case Hasn’t Disappeared
Granted, the underlying platform isn’t collapsing. Snap’s Q3 2025 results showed 10% revenue growth to $1.507 billion and daily active user growth of 8% to 477 million. The company also authorized a $500 million stock repurchase program, signaling some financial confidence. CEO Evan Spiegel noted in Q4 that Snap’s “Q4 results began to reflect the impact of our strategic pivot toward profitable growth, translating into revenue diversification and meaningful margin expansion.”
Snap also posted its first profitable quarter in Q4 2025, with net income of $45.2 million and free cash flow of $205.6 million. The platform still reaches over 450 million daily active users, a real audience that competitors would covet. Irenic’s $26.37 target implies meaningful upside if the operational picture improves, and SNAP stock trading near multi-year lows could attract value-oriented buyers if the legal and regulatory noise fades.
That said, Morningstar has flagged intense competition from Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META | META Price Prediction) and TikTok, along with weak monetization, as long-term structural pressures on Snap’s growth prospects. With Meta generating $58.137 billion in advertising revenue in Q4 2025 alone, the scale gap is hard to ignore.
What to Watch
Watch for whether today’s selling accelerates into the close ahead of the long weekend. With no trading tomorrow, any negative headlines overnight could hit the stock Monday morning without a buffer.
Investors should also watch for whether Snap’s management responds formally to Irenic’s letter, and whether any new developments emerge in the child safety litigation pipeline. Those two threads will likely shape near-term sentiment more than any single data point.
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