Overview:

META closed Friday at $608.75, down more than 10% from pre-earnings levels above $700, after the company guided full-year capex to $125–$145 billion — a $10 billion raise at the midpoint. Q1 revenue came in at $56.31 billion, up 33% year-over-year, and operating income rose 30% to $22.87 billion on a 41% margin. JPMorgan's Doug Anmuth cut his rating to Neutral and slashed his price target to $725 from $825, citing limited AI roadmap visibility. Of 36 analysts covering the stock, 96% still rate i

NEW YORK — Meta Platforms posted one of the strongest revenue quarters in its history this week, then watched its stock fall more than 10% anyway — a market verdict that tells you everything about where investor anxiety currently sits in big tech.

📊 Trader’s Take
My read on this is straightforward: the market isn’t punishing Meta for what it earned — it’s repricing the stock for what it plans to spend. The $10 billion raise at the midpoint of capex guidance is not a rounding error. It is a statement of strategic intent that management cannot yet fully justify with product revenue. I’m watching the $580 level closely — that’s where the stock finds its 2025 breakout base, and a close below it changes the technical picture materially. Watch this if Q2 revenue prints at the high end of the $58–$61 billion range: that would give bulls their first hard data point that the spending is translating to growth. The contrarian question worth sitting with — what if the Wall Street analysts who kept their Buy ratings are simply too anchored to pre-earnings price targets to see the multiple compression already underway?

The Earnings That Should Have Been Enough

On paper, Meta’s Q1 2026 results were exceptional. Revenue reached $56.31 billion, up 33% year-over-year, comfortably clearing the IBES consensus of $55.45 billion. Operating income climbed 30% to $22.87 billion, and the company held its operating margin flat at 41% — a meaningful achievement given the pace of infrastructure build-out happening beneath the surface. Family daily active people hit 3.56 billion. Ad impressions grew 19%. Average price per ad rose 12%. Every core metric pointed in the right direction.

Reported EPS came in at $10.44 per share, though that figure included an $8.03 billion income tax benefit tied to the Trump administration’s tax and spending bill. Strip that out and adjusted EPS lands at approximately $7.31, still ahead of the $6.65 consensus. The business itself is performing. The problem is the bill coming due to keep it that way.

Data Visual
Meta Platforms: Quarterly Revenue Growth (Q1 2025 – Q1 2026)
Shows the year-over-year revenue trajectory for META, highlighting the acceleration into Q1 2026’s $56.31B print.
Meta Platforms: Quarterly Revenue Growth (Q1 2025 – Q1 2026)
Values in $B

When the Guidance Becomes the Story

Meta now expects to spend between $125 billion and $145 billion on capital expenditures in 2026 — a range that, at its midpoint of $135 billion, represents a $20 billion increase from the original guidance issued just three months ago. Reuters reported the guidance raise sent the stock into a sharp post-earnings decline. Q1 capex alone came in at $19.8 billion, up 47% year-over-year. That single-quarter figure is larger than many S&P 500 companies spend in an entire year.

The scale of this commitment forces a question that management has not yet answered with sufficient clarity: at what point does AI infrastructure spending produce a measurable, distinct revenue stream? Meta’s advertising business funds this build. That business is healthy. But the capex trajectory is outrunning the visible monetization path, and the market is beginning to price in that uncertainty.

Key Stat
$135B
Meta’s 2026 capex midpoint — up $20B from original guidance and now larger than the entire annual revenue of most Fortune 100 companies. This is the number that moved the stock, not the earnings beat.
Data Visual
Meta Platforms: Annual Capex Spend and 2026 Guidance Midpoint
Illustrates the sharp escalation in Meta’s capital expenditure commitments, culminating in the $135B 2026 midpoint guidance that rattled markets this week.
Meta Platforms: Annual Capex Spend and 2026 Guidance Midpoint
Values in $B

Where This Sits in the Broader AI Spending Race

Meta’s capex escalation does not exist in a vacuum. As we examined in our earlier piece on big tech AI spending commitments, the race to build out AI infrastructure has become a defining financial theme of 2026 — one with serious implications for free cash flow across the sector. The concern is not that Meta is spending on AI. The concern is velocity and opacity. Microsoft, Google, and Amazon have each tied their AI capex to identifiable cloud revenue lines. Meta’s AI spending is primarily defensive infrastructure and speculative monetization.

This spending backdrop matters for the broader tape, too. As noted in our analysis of S&P 500 technical levels and macro crosscurrents, mega-cap technology names carry enough index weight that a sustained derating in META reverberates well beyond the stock itself. Meta’s market cap sits at $1.55 trillion. A 10% move is not a rounding error for passive fund flows.

Free cash flow for the quarter came in at $12.39 billion — substantial in absolute terms, but compressed relative to the $32.23 billion in operating cash flow, precisely because of capex. The company ended the quarter with $81.18 billion in cash and marketable securities, which provides a meaningful buffer, but that buffer narrows materially if the spending rate holds at Q1’s $19.8 billion pace through year-end.

What the Analyst Community Is Actually Saying

The most significant call this week came from JPMorgan. Analyst Doug Anmuth, who had been a consistent Meta bull, downgraded the stock to Neutral from Overweight and cut his price target to $725 from $825. Anmuth cited three specific concerns: surging AI capex without proportional visibility into returns, limited clarity on the AI product roadmap, and intensifying competition from Google and Amazon. A JPMorgan downgrade on a mega-cap name carries real weight — this is not a boutique firm hedging its call.

Analyst Note
JPMorgan’s Doug Anmuth cut Meta to Neutral with a $725 target (from $825), writing that surging AI capex and limited roadmap visibility make the risk/reward less compelling at current levels — even as he acknowledged the underlying ad business remains strong. The downgrade is notable precisely because Anmuth had been one of the stock’s most vocal institutional advocates.

Other houses moved targets lower while maintaining Buy-equivalent ratings. Truist cut to $840 from $900, Bernstein trimmed to $850 from $900, and Stifel reduced its target to $780 from $805. TD Cowen moved its target to $800 from $820, keeping a Buy. Cantor Fitzgerald dropped to $750 from $850, maintaining Overweight. The pattern is consistent: firms that believe in the thesis are trimming targets to reflect valuation reality, not abandoning the core view.

Across all 36 analysts covering META, the consensus remains Strong Buy. The average price target of $836.81 implies roughly 37% upside from Friday’s close. The lowest target on the Street is $700 — still above current levels. At first glance, that unanimity is comforting. It should also be interrogated: analyst consensus has a structural tendency to lag price action on the downside, and the JPMorgan move suggests at least one firm is willing to step ahead of the crowd.

For broader context on how mega-cap earnings are shaping the tape right now, see our analysis of Apple’s earnings and what they mean for tech sentiment heading into May.

The Levels That Define the Next Move

META closed Friday at $608.75, down from pre-earnings levels above $700 and sitting roughly 24% below its 52-week high of $796.25. The stock’s 52-week low is $520.26, which provides a sense of the floor in a worst-case scenario where capex anxiety compounds into a broader tech selloff. Q2 guidance of $58–$61 billion in revenue — with a midpoint of $59.5 billion that roughly matches consensus — was not a negative catalyst, but it was not the upside surprise that might have offset the capex shock.

The forward P/E of 20.41 is not expensive in isolation. Against a sector trading at materially higher multiples, Meta actually screens as relatively cheap. But that framing assumes the current earnings trajectory holds, and it holds only if the AI spend eventually converts into identifiable revenue. If Q2 revenue prints at $61 billion or above, the bull case gets a meaningful data point. If it prints at $58 billion or below, the conversation shifts to whether the guidance range was itself too optimistic.

Level / Event Value Signal
Current price $608.75 10%+ below pre-earnings level; elevated volume signals distribution, not just profit-taking
Key support — 2025 breakout base ~$580 A weekly close below this level opens a technical path toward the $520 52-week low
JPMorgan price target (downgrade) $725 Lowest major-bank target; reclaiming this level would signal the post-earnings damage is absorbed
Consensus analyst target $836.81 Implies ~37% upside; watch for further target cuts if Q2 revenue prints at the low end of guidance
Q2 2026 revenue guidance range $58–$61B High-end print ($61B+) is the catalyst that could stabilize the stock; low-end miss accelerates the thesis debate

The Case the Bulls Are Still Making

It would be a mistake to dismiss the bull case simply because the post-earnings move was ugly. Meta’s advertising engine is structurally sound. Three and a half billion daily active users across its family of apps is a number no competitor can match, and the 19% growth in ad impressions alongside a 12% rise in average ad price suggests the monetization engine is still firing. The company generated $32.23 billion in operating cash flow in a single quarter. Free cash flow of $12.39 billion — even compressed by capex — would be the envy of most companies in any sector.

The Q2 revenue guidance midpoint of $59.5 billion implies approximately 25% year-over-year growth. That is not the growth profile of a company in trouble. And if AI infrastructure spending does eventually unlock new revenue streams — whether through AI agents, new ad targeting capabilities, or enterprise tools — the current capex program could look prescient rather than reckless. History suggests Zuckerberg has been willing to absorb short-term pain for long-term position before, and history suggests the market has eventually rewarded him for it.

The risk is that this time the numbers are simply larger, the competitive pressure more diffuse, and the timeline to monetization less visible. That combination is what JPMorgan is pricing in at $725, and it is what the market priced in on Wednesday night.

META enters the next quarter with one clear assignment: show traders that $135 billion in spending is building something they can eventually price. Until that clarity arrives, the gap between the $608 stock and the $836 consensus target is less an opportunity than a question mark.


This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

James Whitfield is our pre-market analyst at PreMarket Daily, covering U.S. equity futures, overnight movers, earnings releases, and the macro catalysts that set the tone before the 9:30 AM ET open. James...