Quick reading
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META’s capital spending nearly doubled to $145 billion in one cycle, while free cash flow fell 19%, as CFO Susan Li admitted the company continues to underestimate IT needs.
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Meta’s first-quarter EPS of $10.44 included a tax benefit of $3.13 per share, which brought underlying earnings closer to $7.31 and masked true profitability.
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Metaplatforms (NASDAQ:META) at $622.98 appears stretched on any rally toward $650, where the math behind its growing AI capital bill stops working in shareholders’ favor. The stock has spent six months stuck in a corridor, with a structural concern overshadowing an otherwise solid operating story.
Meta runs the largest advertising network on the open Internet, reaching 3.56 billion daily active people on Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Messenger. Advertising generated $55.02 billion in revenue in the first quarter of 2026. Shares are down 5.54% year to date and 6.29% in the twelve months, even as revenue accelerated to 33.1% year over year last quarter.
Why bulls want every dip
The first quarter of 2026 produced a fifth consecutive EPS beat, with EPS of $10.44 versus consensus of $6.66 and revenue of $56.31 billion. Ad impressions increased by 19% and price per ad increased by 12% simultaneously, a rare combination of pricing power.
Margins remain best in class at 82% gross, 41.44% operating and 30.08% net, with an ROIC of 20.69%. The forward multiple stands at 19x, which is economical for a company that grows under 30 years. Sell-side support is overwhelming: 57 Buy or Strong Buy ratings, a consensus target of $826.75, and zero Sells.
Capex Bill Bulls Are Funding
The capital spending forecast for FY26 was raised to between $125 billion and $145 billion, up from $72.22 billion in 2025. That’s nearly doubled in twelve months. Chief Financial Officer Susan Li told analysts that Meta “has continued to underestimate our computing needs even as we have significantly increased capacity.” The depreciation of that construction flows directly into operating income.
Free cash flow fell 19.4% in 2025, even as revenue rose 22.2% and Reality Labs lost $19.2 billion. First-quarter EPS included a tax profit of $8.03 billion worth $3.13 per share, putting underlying EPS closer to $7.31. Insiders sold heavily near the threshold: Nine executives dumped a combined 39,751 shares in a single day at $618.43, and COO Javier Olivan sold early at $680.09.
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The argument for staying put
The App Family engine is firing and management guided 2026 operating income ahead of 2025. A stock with 22 times trailing earnings at these returns on equity is fairly priced.