
Meta Platforms, Inc. remains one of the most consequential companies in the global technology sector. Its core advertising business continues to generate high margins and cash flow, while its strategic pivot toward artificial intelligence (AI) aims to transform both its existing product ecosystem and longer-term growth profile. However, heightened capital expenditures, regulatory challenges, and execution risk tied to AI initiatives have pressured the stock and investor sentiment in 2025. We view the recent pullback as a potential strategic entry point for long-term investors who can tolerate volatility associated with capital deployment and regulatory uncertainty.
Meta Platforms develops social media and communications technologies that connect people and enable commerce. Its primary revenue engine is the Family of Apps (FoA) segment, which includes Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Messenger, and Threads. These platforms collectively reach billions of users globally and generate the majority of the company’s advertising revenue.
Complementing the FoA segment, Reality Labs focuses on emerging computing platforms, including smart glasses and immersive technologies. In 2025, Meta also formalized Meta Superintelligence Labs, a dedicated AI research division centered on advancing large-scale generative models and competition with leading AI developers.
In third-quarter 2025 results, Meta reported robust revenue growth (~26% year-over-year) and advertising demand that exceeded many market expectations. However, earnings per share came under pressure due to elevated expenses, including AI infrastructure costs and higher tax charges. Following the release, the stock experienced a marked sell-off, illustrating investor concern over spending trajectories relative to near-term profitability.
Crucially, management now projects capital expenditures of $70–72 billion in 2025, with indications that capex will be “notably larger” in 2026. This is a substantial increase relative to the $39.2 billion spent in 2024 and implies potential annual spending exceeding $100 billion should current investment plans continue.
Whereas elevated R&D and infrastructure investment can be value-creating over the long term, markets have reacted negatively in the short term because free cash flows are being compressed and visibility on return timing remains limited.
Meta’s advertising segment remains the cornerstone of its business, accounting for roughly 97% of total revenue and underpinned by large, engaged user bases across multiple platforms.
Key drivers:
New Monetization Surfaces: Threads and WhatsApp are increasingly monetized as Meta introduces innovative ad formats and business engagement tools.
In addition to traditional metric improvements, Meta is advancing automated AI advertising tools that aim to manage campaign creation and optimization on behalf of advertisers, potentially lowering barriers to entry for small and medium enterprises. Over time, these tools could expand the addressable advertising market by enabling more entities to participate effectively in digital advertising.
From an academic perspective, research on Meta’s recommendation frameworks — such as Meta Lattice, which redesigns model space to improve cross-domain performance and cost efficiency — suggests that the firm is actively pursuing structural AI improvements that can underpin scale and quality in advertising technology.
Meta’s transition toward AI is a defining theme for its next phase of growth. Management hopes that AI will not only strengthen existing products but also enable new forms of user experience and revenue generation.
AI Initiatives Driving Future Optionality
AI Research Investment: Building out Meta Superintelligence Labs reflects an ambition to participate meaningfully in the global race for advanced AI, including efforts to achieve “personal superintelligence” where AI assistants deliver broad capabilities directly to consumer devices.
While the AI transition is strategically compelling, it presents several execution risks:
Operational Complexity: Developing cutting-edge models (e.g., Avocado) introduces execution risk, particularly given internal restructuring and workforce reductions in some AI units.
Meta’s business model — particularly its personalized advertising engine — faces regulatory scrutiny, especially in Europe. For instance, Austria’s Supreme Court recently ruled that Meta’s personalized ad model is unlawful under EU data rules, requiring changes that may impede data-driven targeting and measurement effectiveness.
Such rulings could have material implications for ad relevance, pricing, and measurement accuracy if compliance constraints limit the integration of user data across touchpoints. This regulatory risk is a non-trivial factor that investors must monitor as part of broader European and global data privacy enforcement trends.
Meta has taken steps to return capital to shareholders, including a quarterly cash dividend initiated in early December 2025. While nominal relative to earnings, the dividend may signal management confidence in sustained cash generation and a willingness to balance reinvestment with shareholder returns.
At the same time, elevated capex has raised questions about free cash flow trajectories. Analysts now forecast Meta’s 2026 total expenses could approach $97 billion, reflecting continued infrastructure and AI spending pressure on operating leverage.
Following the recent sell-off, Meta shares trade at a price-to-earnings ratio that reflects both its strong historical growth and near-term uncertainty on investment returns. Consensus estimates project mid-single-digit EPS growth in 2026–2027, illustrating the market’s cautious stance toward near-term profitability in the face of heavy capital deployment.
Bullish Considerations
Bearish Considerations
Execution and Competitive Pressure: Delivering next-generation AI products and maintaining competitive differentiation against peers with similar scale and resources remains a material execution risk.

Meta’s current valuation and market positioning reflect a balance between a resilient core business and near-term uncertainty tied to strategic AI deployment and regulatory pressure. We believe the recent pullback presents an opportunistic entry point for long-term investors who have conviction in Meta’s AI strategy and continued core advertising strength. However, a prudent investment approach requires careful monitoring of regulatory developments, AI product milestones, and capex efficiency improvements.
Meta’s narrative in 2026 will likely hinge on its ability to articulate and deliver measurable financial returns from its AI investments while sustaining advertising growth in an increasingly competitive and regulated environment.