Shares of the Snapchat parent are likely to face new pressure when employees for the first time are allowed to sell their stock following the company’s blockbuster initial public offering.
Wall Street is increasingly worried that Snap is succumbing to competition from Facebook and Instagram.
Instagram, which has adopted features from Snapchat, has 250 million daily active users, compared with Snapchat’s 173 million at the end of the second quarter, fewer than what was expected.
“We remain on the sidelines until we see signs of any boost ,or get closer to the end of the lock-up expiration,” said the Snapchat official.
Starting on Monday, employees are allowed to sell hundreds of millions of their shares for the first time since Snap’s $3.4 billion market debut in March, the largest U.S. IPO in years.
To try to reassure investors, Snap Chief Executive Officer Evan Spiegel and co-founder Robert Murphy on Thursday committed to not sell any of their combined 422 million shares in 2017.