6/18/2026
‘Shut It Down’: Irenic Capital Management Wants Snap to Kill Its New $2,195 Product, but the CEO Isn’t Backing Down
Inc.com (06/18/26) Fearn, Georgia
Snap co-founder and CEO Evan Spiegel has spent more than a decade trying to build a new type of computer—one that people will wear on their faces. His $2,195 answer debuted Tuesday. However, the project immediately ran into two objections that could sink it: The glasses are expensive, and they are hard to ignore. The black “Specs” weigh between 132 and 136 grams and feature thick frames large enough to contain two processors, displays, cameras, and a battery. Specs are Spiegel’s attempt to build a second act beyond Snapchat’s advertising business. However, investor Irenic Capital Management, a shareholder in the company, is already demanding that Snap secure outside financing for the unit or shut it down. In March, the firm noted that the company has spent more than $3.5 billion on Specs and continues to burn about $500 million annually. Now the product meant to vindicate that spending risks being too costly—and too conspicuous—to attract the customers the business needs. Yet, Spiegel has cast such objections as short-term thinking. “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,” he told Reuters following the launch. Snap told Inc. that it does not need to raise outside capital for Specs at this stage because the launch and investment roadmap are already incorporated into its broader financial planning. Yet, nevertheless, the company said it remains open to funding structures or partnerships that could accelerate growth or expand the Specs ecosystem. That position puts Snap directly at odds with Irenic, which has argued that the company should stop using its own balance sheet to finance the project. The glasses are arguably much more high-tech than many other options currently on the market. Specs can project full-color digital objects across a wearer’s view, operate without a phone or external computer, and provide a 51-degree field of view. Snap is positioning them between lightweight AI glasses and Apple's $3,499 Vision Pro. However, at 132 to 136 grams, Specs weigh roughly twice as much as Meta’s Ray-Ban Display glasses and offer up to four hours of mixed-use battery life. Avi Greengart, president and lead analyst at the research firm Techsponential, told Inc. that $2,200 is not a mainstream price for smart glasses that don’t connect consumers to an existing technology ecosystem. But he added the price is reasonable for developers and early adopters buying what is effectively a computer for the face. “Honestly, the bigger issue may not be price, but the way Specs look and feel,” Greengart said. Snap’s fashion-focused advertising campaign may help, he added, “but only to a point.” Snap says it does not expect Specs to immediately become a mainstream product. The company told Inc. that its initial rollout will target technology enthusiasts, creators, studios, and developers, before moving toward broader adoption as the hardware, software, and ecosystem mature. That strategy creates what Greengart calls the “chicken and egg problem” facing every new software platform. Developers must create compelling experiences before consumers have a reason to buy the hardware. But it’s difficult to find a reason to invest in a platform that doesn't currently have widespread consumer demand. “Even Apple has had trouble getting apps for Apple Vision Pro,” Greengart said. Snap will therefore need to build core applications itself and pay for them—or encourage important third-party developers to establish a baseline experience, he added. Snap has misread demand for eyewear before. In 2017, the company recorded $39.9 million in charges tied to unsold inventory and canceled purchase commitments for the original Spectacles. Those camera glasses cost $129.99. The new Specs are far more advanced; they're also almost 17 times as expensive.
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