Snap CEO Spiegel defends Specs as long-term bet, pushes back against activist pressure


Evan Spiegel co-founder and CEO of Snap Inc., attends the Milken Institute Global Conference 2025 in Beverly Hills, California, U.S., May 7, 2025. REUTERS/Mike Blake

June 16 (Reuters) - Snap CEO Evan Spiegel told Reuters ⁠the company's new Specs augmented-reality glasses are part of its ‌long-term strategy, pushing back on activist investor demands to shut down or spin off the cash-burning unit behind the device.

The Snapchat parent launched the device, its ​first consumer AR glasses, on Tuesday at ⁠a price of $2,195 and ⁠pitched them as the future of how people interact with technology in ⁠the ‌AI age.

The launch comes months after Irenic Capital Management pushed Snap to consider options for Specs as part ⁠of a series of changes that the activist ​investor said could ‌boost the social media company's worth by at least five ⁠times.

Irenic has ​argued Specs should be funded on its own, noting Snap has already spent more than $3.5 billion on the unit.

"While investors may want more ⁠short-term profitability, our job at Snap is ​to drive long-term profitability and the long-term success of the company," Spiegel said in an interview.

"One of the things we've always been clear ⁠about as we've built Snap... was that we were committed to our long-term vision. And that includes staying independent rather than selling the company," he said.

Spiegel said the company is expected to ​share "more later this year in terms of ⁠how we're thinking about partnerships over a longer period of time."

The company ​carved out the unit as a ‌standalone subsidiary in January, a structure ​that could let it raise outside funding.

(Reporting by Jaspreet Singh and Aditya Soni in Bengaluru; Editing by Pooja Desai)

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