The highly anticipated IPO is expected to be the one of the largest since Alibaba Group raised $22 billion in going public in 2014. But Snap is better known than the e-commerce company, drawing comparisons instead to the IPOs of Facebook (FB) and Twitter (TWTR).
The New York Times recently published an article exploring whether Snapchat could be the future of news. CNET section editor Dan Ackerman joins C…
According to IPO documents filed on Thursday, Snap has lost nearly $1 billion in the past two years.
The company, which describes itself in its IPO registration as a “camera” company, said 158 million people use Snapchat daily.
“We believe that reinventing the camera represents our greatest opportunity to improve the way that people live and communicate,” Snap said in the filing. “Our products empower people to express themselves, live in the moment, learn about the world and have fun together.”
The fast-growing social network for the younger set was created by Evan Spiegel in 2012. Spiegel dropped out of Stanford University just three classes shy of graduation, deciding itself to focus on an app that let people send photos, videos and messages that would disappear a few seconds after viewing.
But rather than die a fast death as a “sexting app,” Snapchat showed a knack for evolving based on user whims and demands, just as Facebook has over the years. This, as both companies have discovered, is key to outlasting social media fads.
Los Angeles-based Snap had revenue of $404.5 million in 2016, up from $58.7 million in 2015. Its net loss was $514.6 million last year, and $372.9 million the year before.
Facebook was profitable in 2011, the year before its IPO. Twitter has never turned a profit.