Snap shares surge after IPO banks give flurry of 'buy' ratings


Red flag?: Analysts flagging the company's slowing user growth, widening losses and lack of voting rights for outside investors.

NEW YORK: Shares of Snap Inc jumped nearly 5 percent on Monday after several of the Snapchat owner's IPO underwriters handed it badly needed "buy" ratings.

Snap's initial public offering on March 1 was the largest by a technology firm in three years but trading has been volatile, with many investors critical of decelerating user growth. Snap has warned it may never become profitable.

Analysts unrelated to the IPO had in recent weeks mostly assigned neutral or negative ratings to Snap, making it one of the worst-rated stocks on Wall Street.

But on Monday, at least eight banks involved in Snap's IPO gave it positive ratings, including Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs. Its stock rose 4.79 percent to end at $23.83.

That left Snap up 37 percent from its $17 initial public offer price, but still down more than $3 from its peak in its second day of trading.

The Los Angeles-based company's app, which allows users to share short-lived messages and pictures, is popular with young people. But it faces intense competition from larger rivals like Facebook Inc.

Like many technology companies popular with consumers, including Facebook and Alibaba, Snap's IPO was a hit with non-professional investors.

TD Ameritrade said Snap accounted for 7 percent of trading volume on its online platform during its first day of trading. As of last Thursday, almost half of its retail customers who bought the stock in the IPO have since sold their shares.

Snap has also become popular with short sellers betting it will fall, with over $600 million worth of its stock currently sold short, according to Astec Analytics.

"The last time we saw something this interesting was when we shorted LendingClub at $22," said Brad Lamensdorf, co-manager of the AdvisorShares Ranger Equity Bear ETF.

LendingClub is a peer-to-peer lender whose shares soared 56 percent to over $23 in its 2014 IPO, only to sink to around $5 after a scandal related to its business practices.

Morgan Stanley analyst Brian Nowak started Snap with an "overweight" rating and a $28-price target.

"SNAP's engaged/hard-to-reach millennial users and unique video offerings should attract significant ad dollars," Nowak wrote in a research note.

Snap recently traded at the equivalent of 22 times its expected 12-month sales, expensive compared to Facebook at 10, according to Thomson Reuters data.

JP Morgan, also an underwriter, started Snap with a "neutral" rating, with analyst Doug Anmuth pointing to an "increasingly competitive social media landscape." - Reuters

Limited time offer:
Just RM5 per month.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month
RM5/month

Billed as RM5/month for the 1st 6 months then RM13.90 thereafters.

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Snap , shares , stocks , buy , IPO , Morgan Stanley , Goldman Sachs , rating ,

   

Next In Business News

Gamuda Land announces retail partners for Gamuda Gardens
YNH reaffirms bondholders with remedied technical defaults
Ringgit ends firmer against US dollar
KPJ Healthcare partners with Trustr for AI-driven healthcare solutions
Homeritz stays positive amid economic challenges
Unisem expects performance boost amid semiconductor recovery
Gadang wins RM280mil data centre contract
S P Setia unveils Casaville single-storey bungalows in Setia EcoHill, Semenyih
FBM KLCI rebounds to hit fresh two-year high
Asian FX subdued after mixed US data; equities set for weekly gains

Others Also Read