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Activist investor Irenic swoops in on Snap with new stake, shares surge

By Thomson Reuters Mar 31, 2026 | 12:01 PM

By Svea Herbst-Bayliss

March 31 (Reuters) – Activist investor Irenic Capital Management said on Tuesday that technology company Snap could be worth at least five times as much as today’s valuation but needs ​to cut costs, optimize its portfolio and use artificial intelligence ‌better.

“Snap should be worth a lot more than $7 billion,” Irenic portfolio manager Adam Katz wrote to Snap co-founder and Chief Executive Evan Spiegel, adding that if the company follows Irenic’s blueprint for change, its valuation could soar to around $35 billion.

Irenic said on ‌Tuesday ​that it has an economic interest of roughly ⁠2.5% of the company’s Class ⁠A shares.

Irenic, which has a history of successfully pushing for change at companies in the technology and aerospace sectors, urged Snap to spin off or shut Specs, its augmented-reality eyeglasses unit. It also called ​on Snap to consider cutting costs through layoffs and to buy back more discounted stock, among other moves.

“Snap should not continue doing what ⁠it has been doing. It’s not ⁠working,” Katz said in the letter. “And we’re not telling you ​anything you don’t know already.”

Investors reacted quickly by pushing up Snap’s stock ​price more than 12% on the last trading day of ‌the quarter. Since the start of the year, the stock price has lost 45%.

While Katz complimented management by noting how it  built a widely used social network, he also said, “we think you have a second act,” and ⁠leaned heavily on how Snap could make better use of artificial intelligence.

Bloomberg reported Irenic’s position shortly before Irenic published its letter to the company.

Snap said ⁠it engages with all ‌shareholders and welcomes their thoughts. “We’ve taken steps to improve ⁠performance, strengthen free cash flow, and offset dilution, and ​will ‌continue to evaluate actions that drive long-term value for ​all stockholders,” ⁠Chairman Michael Lynton said in a statement.

Last year, Snap said it would buy back up to $500 million worth of Class A shares. It also partnered with Perplexity AI to integrate a conversational search engine into Snap.

(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss in Boston and Kritika Lamba in Bengaluru; Editing by Jonathan Ananda ​and Matthew Lewis)