Why Shutterstock (SSTK) Stock Is Up Today


What Happened?
Shares of stock photography and footage provider Shutterstock (NYSE:SSTK) jumped 22.4% in the afternoon session after Getty Images announced a landmark display partnership with OpenAI.
The deal signals a major shift for Getty from fighting AI developers in court to actively monetizing its content through them. This matters for Shutterstock for two distinct reasons. First, it is a mechanical merger arbitrage trade: Shutterstock is in the final stages of a pending "merger of equals" with Getty Images, originally agreed upon in January 2025. Because Getty is acquiring Shutterstock using a mix of £245 million in cash and 319.4 million Getty shares, the 123% explosion in Getty's stock price directly inflates the implied buyout value for Shutterstock shareholders.
The UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) recently moved to conditionally clear the merger, contingent on Shutterstock divesting its editorial business, meaning the deal is nearing the finish line.
Second, there is a clear sector read-through: Getty's deal validates that large AI platforms are willing to partner with traditional stock-image providers for rights-cleared, licensed visual libraries to power their search features. Even outside of the merger context, Shutterstock's own massive content library is now being repriced by the market as a highly monetizable AI asset rather than a casualty of generative AI disruption.
The shares closed the day at $15.68, up 18.8% from the previous close.
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What Is The Market Telling Us
Shutterstock’s shares are very volatile and have had 27 moves greater than 5% over the last year. But moves this big are rare even for Shutterstock and indicate this news significantly impacted the market’s perception of the business.
The biggest move we wrote about over the last year was 8 months ago when the stock dropped 9.4% on the news that its proposed merger with Getty Images was referred for a more in-depth, Phase 2 review by the UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA).
This deeper investigation was launched despite Getty Images offering remedies to avoid it. The CMA expressed concerns that combining two of the largest stock imagery providers could result in higher prices and lower quality services for customers. While Shutterstock voiced its disappointment with the decision, the company affirmed it remained committed to the merger. The referral created uncertainty about the deal's future, raising the possibility of significant delays or even it being blocked, which concerned investors.
Shutterstock is down 16% since the beginning of the year, and at $15.70 per share, it is trading 40.6% below its 52-week high of $26.41 from October 2025. Investors who bought $1,000 worth of Shutterstock’s shares 5 years ago would now be looking at only $160.24.
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