But the world’s biggest players got to benefit from online ad market recovery.
Fourth Quarter Highlights
For the quarter that ended on December 31st, Snap reported that sales rose 5% YoY to $1.36 billion which was below $1.38 billion that Wall Street expected. However, its net losses narrowed from $288 million to $248 million.
Disappointing monetization despite solid user growth.
Snap reported better than anticipated sales growth but less optimistic sales conversion rates. Although Snap had 414 million daily active users which translate to a 10% YoY growth and sequential increase of 2%, average revenue per user (ARPU) dropped significantly from $3.47 made during last year’s comparable quarter to $3.20, clearly showing that revenue performance fell short.
Mixed guidance made Wall Street concerned about the sales makeup.
Snap expects DAUs to increase to 420 million in the first quarter, but ARPU is expected to fall short again. Snap guided for revenue growth between 11% and 15% which implies revenue in the range between $1.095 billion and $1.135 billion.
Snap and Pinterest have a different online ad narrative compared to Meta.
Snap ended 2023 with 7 million premium subscribers who pay for its Snapchat+ and it will now focus its efforts on growing users and deepening engagement in ‘monetizable’ markets that include North America and Europe.
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