A Spanish judge ordered Meta to pay €479 million to digital publishers this week. The ruling affects 87 media companies and press agencies that claimed the tech giant misused their users’ personal data.
Meta Platforms, Inc., META
The court determined Meta gained unfair competitive advantage through its advertising operations. Facebook and Instagram ads violated EU General Data Protection Regulation standards according to the judgment.
Spain’s digital press filed the original lawsuit. They argued Meta improperly handled protected user information when serving advertisements across its platforms.
The court noted Meta Ireland failed to provide financial records for its Spanish operations during proceedings. This lack of cooperation influenced the final ruling.
Meta shares dropped toward $590 following the court decision. The decline intensified as Spain opened a separate parliamentary probe into Android tracking allegations.
Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez declared no platform operates above national law. His statement added political pressure to the regulatory investigation. Spanish authorities are examining claims that Meta used concealed methods to track Android users without proper consent.
The stock broke below its ascending trendline that held since spring. This technical failure pushed META through the 20, 50, 100, and 200-day exponential moving averages. All four indicators now sit above the current price level.
The Parabolic SAR indicator turned negative in November and has stayed there. Price action shows lower highs and lower lows forming a bearish pattern. The stock is heading toward support between $575 and $565.
The Relative Strength Index moved into oversold range but shows no divergence pattern. This suggests sellers remain in control without panic selling. Trading volume has not spiked, indicating potential for further weakness.
Intraday analysis shows META trading below the Supertrend indicator on 30-minute charts. Each rally attempt near $596 to $600 faces immediate selling pressure.
The Directional Movement Index places the negative line firmly above the positive line. This confirms downward momentum dominates short-term trading. Buyers have shown little interest in defending price levels.
Traders need to see META reclaim $615 to $620 before considering the downtrend broken. That zone matches the underside of the broken trendline and the 20-day EMA.
The Spanish investigation adds another layer of regulatory risk. Meta must provide testimony to Spanish authorities in coming weeks. European regulators have previously fined the company for GDPR violations and Digital Markets Act compliance issues.
The Android tracking allegations echo earlier regulatory battles. If proven, Meta could face additional fines or operational restrictions in European markets. The legal uncertainty comes as the stock struggles with weakened technical structure and broken support levels.
The post Meta Stock: Spanish Court Hits Company with €479 Million Fine appeared first on CoinCentral.


