Meta Platforms shocked markets after revealing plans to ramp up its 2026 capital expenditure to as much as $145 billion, a dramatic increase tied directly to its aggressive artificial intelligence expansion strategy. The announcement triggered a steep reaction from investors, sending Meta (META) stock down roughly 9% in trading sessions as concerns mounted over rising costs and long-term profitability pressures.
The spending forecast signals a major acceleration in Meta’s AI ambitions, as the company continues building large-scale infrastructure to support foundation models and advanced advertising systems. However, the scale of investment has raised concerns that Meta may be overextending itself in a highly competitive AI arms race dominated by Big Tech hyperscalers.
Meta’s revised capital expenditure outlook reflects what the company describes as persistent underestimation of its AI computing needs. These needs are primarily driven by foundation models, large-scale systems trained on vast datasets to power products across its ecosystem.
Meta Platforms, Inc., META
The company previously estimated significantly lower spending levels, but now expects 2026 capex to nearly double its 2025 forecast of around $72 billion. This shift highlights how rapidly AI infrastructure demands are escalating across the tech industry.
Despite the heavy spending outlook, Meta emphasized that its AI systems are already improving efficiency. Internal tools reportedly boosted ad conversion performance by more than 6%, while engineering productivity has increased by roughly 30% since early 2025, according to company estimates. Still, investors remain cautious that such gains may not be enough to offset rising infrastructure costs in the near term.
Even as markets reacted negatively, Meta’s core business metrics remain strong. The company reported that its family of apps now serves 3.56 billion daily active users, marking a 4% year-over-year increase. This steady user growth reinforces Meta’s dominant position in global digital engagement.
Advertising continues to be the company’s primary revenue engine and remains the financial backbone supporting its AI expansion. Meta is also expanding monetization efforts across newer platforms like WhatsApp and Threads, intensifying competition with TikTok, YouTube Shorts, and X.
However, analysts note that while user engagement is stable, it is no longer enough on its own to reassure investors when spending levels are accelerating at such a rapid pace.
To balance its aggressive investment cycle, Meta has also signaled plans for workforce reductions, aligning with a broader strategy to improve efficiency while scaling AI infrastructure. The company’s leadership believes automation and AI tools can offset staffing costs over time.
Meta’s Value Optimization Suite and other ad-targeting systems have already shown strong revenue momentum, reportedly exceeding a $20 billion annualized run rate. These tools are central to the company’s long-term strategy of making advertising more efficient and AI-driven.
Still, the combination of layoffs and soaring capital expenditures has created a mixed narrative for investors, one that blends operational efficiency gains with rising short-term financial strain.
The post Meta (META) Stock; Slips 9% as 2026 Capex Surges to $145B on AI Push appeared first on CoinCentral.
