Seeing a $1.45 trillion company experience uncertainty is subtly disorienting. On the surface, nothing noteworthy occurred as Meta Platforms closed Wednesday at $574.46, down less than $1. However, the image becomes more intriguing and a little more difficult to read when you zoom out even a little. Back in August, the 52-week high was $796.25. Currently, the stock is trading more than $220 below that amount. That kind of retreat raises serious concerns about what investors are currently pricing in for a company with $134.9 billion in annual revenue, quarterly results that consistently exceed Wall Street’s projections, and a net margin of over 30%.
Delivered in late January, the most recent earnings report was truly impressive. Meta beat the consensus by $0.72 with its fourth-quarter earnings per share of $8.88. Revenue of $59.89 billion was 23.8% higher than the previous year and exceeded projections. The return on equity was 38.61%. These figures show a business operating at a high level, with advertising revenue continuing to rise as AI-improved targeting makes its ad products more effective, rather than a company in trouble. Despite lowering its price target to $775, Morgan Stanley maintained Meta as a top pick following the report, indicating that even the bulls are quietly recalibrating.
NASDAQ: META · Internet Content & Information / Communication Services
$574.46
−$4.77 (−0.82%) today
| Founded | February 4, 2004 — Cambridge, Massachusetts |
| Founders | Mark Zuckerberg, Eduardo Saverin, Dustin Moskovitz, Andrew McCollum, Chris Hughes |
| Headquarters | Menlo Park, California, USA |
| CEO | Mark Zuckerberg (July 2004 – present) |
| CFO | Susan Li |
| Employees | 78,865 (2025) |
| Annual Revenue | $134.9 billion · Q4 2025: $59.89B (+23.8% YoY) |
| Market Cap | $1.45 trillion |
| P/E Ratio (TTM) | 24.45 · EPS: $23.50 |
| 52-Week Range | $479.80 – $796.25 |
| Dividend | $0.525/quarter · $2.10 annualized · 0.37% yield |
| Next Earnings Date | April 29, 2026 (est. after hours) |
| Analyst Consensus | Moderate Buy · 91% Buy · Avg target $843.57 |
| Core Products | Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Messenger, Threads, Ray-Ban smart glasses, Reality Labs |
However, the events that transpired between that earnings beat and the current stock price reveal a more nuanced picture. In quick succession, there were two legal setbacks. Shares fell 8% in a single session as a result of two separate civil penalty rulings in New Mexico and a California jury verdict that analysts referred to as a “bellwether” case. In the days leading up to those choices, Meta’s market capitalization dropped by about $119 billion. In isolation, the legal exposure isn’t disastrous, but what’s concerning are potential follow-up lawsuits, heightened regulatory scrutiny, and a political environment that has become less tolerant of big social media companies in recent years. Using the phrase “weather the storm” in a way that felt both measured and telling, Morningstar released a note that acknowledged the legal obstacles while maintaining a $850 fair value estimate.
The insider selling that goes hand in hand with all of this is difficult to ignore. Meta executives sold 161,448 shares for about $103 million during the most recent quarter. In February, CTO Andrew Bosworth reduced his direct stake by 74% by selling 8,089 shares at an average price of $631.24. Javier Olivan, COO, reduced his role by almost 17%. Technically, these transactions prove nothing, but they are routinely disclosed and frequently justified by diversification or prearranged plans. However, when sentiment shifts, investors catalog these kinds of details and go back to them.
The current movement of the Meta stock price is further complicated by the AI spending story. The company is constructing data centers at a scale that is truly difficult to comprehend; according to reports, one facility in Louisiana needs power equivalent to a small state in the United States. Despite keeping an Overweight rating, Wells Fargo lowered its price target from $856 to $765 and Erste Group downgraded the stock from Buy to Hold due to the significant increase in capital expenditure estimates for 2026. Spending on AI is not illogical. Given how early the commercial returns on AI infrastructure are still, it is reasonable to be concerned that the market is having difficulty modeling what the payoff looks like and when it arrives.
All of that caution is accompanied by legitimate reasons for optimism. Nearly 4 billion people use the Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Messenger apps in Meta’s family each month. There isn’t really a comparable precedent in media history for that number. Algorithmic advancements that increase the value of each impression continue to benefit the ad business, which accounts for nearly all of the company’s profits. The company’s infrastructure options are being expanded through a partnership on AI chip development with Arm and AMD. Additionally, the Ray-Ban smart glasses, which recently used an AI assistant to help a blind marathon runner navigate a race in real time, are beginning to feel more like a product with real traction than just a hardware experiment.
Buy is recommended in 91% of the 74 analyst ratings that cover Meta. With an average twelve-month price target of $843.57, the stock is expected to rise by about 47% from its Wednesday closing price. For a business this size and profitable, the difference between the current price and the analyst target is abnormally large. Investors appear to think that the legal risks are controllable and that spending on AI will eventually pay off. Whether that vindication will take months or years is still up in the air.
Consensus estimates for Q1 2026 call for $6.63 in earnings per share, a decrease from Q4’s $8.88, which reflects seasonal advertising patterns, but still a significant figure. The next earnings release is set for April 29. Any updates on the legal situation, the trajectory of capital expenditure, and whether the AI products are producing quantifiable revenue lift or just showing up as costs are what the market will actually be paying attention to. For the past four quarters, Meta has outperformed forecasts. The question is whether that run and the confidence it has created will be sufficient to keep the stock stable while the more difficult questions are resolved.

