| Snap stock soars 35%, despite doubts over whether momentum can be sustained 
 marketwatch.com
 
 Snap Inc. finally reported a better-than-expected quarter, and that  has investors debating whether the company’s new momentum is here to  stay or poised to disappear after 10 seconds.  The  ephemeral-messaging company doubled year-over-year revenue, ahead of  Wall Street’s projections, as it began to gain traction for its newly  introduced  self-service ad platform.  More local businesses are advertising on Snapchat, but the company also  cautioned that the fourth quarter tends to be the busiest one for brand  advertisers, which could lead to a moderation in growth for the current  period.
 
 Snap shares                                                                                                                                                                                                                        SNAP, +40.26%                                                                                                                                                           are up 35% in Wednesday morning trading. The stock is now trading  above its $17 IPO price for the first time since July.
 
 Not all are convinced that the company has turned things around for  the long term. “While this clearly marks a change in trend,”  MoffettNathanson analyst Michael Nathanson wrote of Snap’s latest  results, “we wonder how much of these gains are sustainable and  Snap-specific, versus merely a rising tide lifting all boats (given [an]  acceleration in ad revenues at [Alphabet Inc.’s                                                                                                                                                                                                                        GOOGL, -1.05%                                                                                                                                                            ] Google and Facebook Inc.                                                                                                                                                                                                                        FB, -0.59%                                                                                                                                                           too), a theory enforced by Snap’s own guidance.”
 
 Nathanson  has a sell rating on shares and a $10 price target. He questions  whether the strong growth from small and midsize businesses that Snap  cited in its earnings call masks weakness with larger brands. “We give  Snap full credit for the work it’s done to make the app more accessible,  as well as making the platform more performance marketer friendly,” he  wrote, but its valuation at 18 times 2018 revenue estimates doesn’t  warrant more than a sell rating, in his view.
 
 </snip> Read the rest here: marketwatch.com
 |