Meta Stock Falls 3.28% This Week Despite Ackman Endorsement and Bullish Analyst Targets
Meta (META) fell 3.28% this week to $639.77. The stock is down 11.91% over one year and 13% from where the stock closed after Meta’s recent blowout earnings.
Meta guided to $115B to $135B in capital expenditures for 2026 for AI infrastructure.
Bill Ackman disclosed a significant stake in Meta on February 11. He called it one of the world’s greatest businesses.
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Meta Platforms closed the week at $639.77, down 3.28% from February 6. The S&P 500 fell just 1.29% over the same period, while the Nasdaq 100 dropped 1.27%. It’s another losing week for Meta, and the stock is now down 13% from where it closed the day after reporting blowout earnings.
Let’s dive into the three storylines that drove price action for Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META) this week.
Year to date, Meta is down 3.08%, trading below where it closed December 31. Over one year, shares are off 11.91% from February 13, 2025. This week’s drop pushed the stock further from its 52-week high of $795.06. The question is whether the three developments that shaped this week signal opportunity or warning.
On February 11th, Pershing Square’s Bill Ackman disclosed a significant new stake in Meta, describing it as “one of the world’s greatest businesses” with strong long-term upside from AI integration. Ackman dumped Chipotle, Nike, and Hilton to make room for Meta, Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN), and Alphabet. That’s a bet on the Magnificent Seven over consumer discretionary, reflecting conviction that Meta’s AI infrastructure investments will pay off.
Reddit’s retail traders noticed. Sentiment spiked to 80 on February 11 at 9pm ET, the highest reading of the week.
I defended the trade on 24/7 Wall St. yesterday. Amazon now trades for half the forward P/E of Walmart. Meta is now down 13% from posting outstanding earnings and once again proved its AI spend is going to drive significant revenue acceleration. The sell-off in these names feel more than overdone right now.
Meta guided to $115 to $135 billion in capital expenditures for 2026, a staggering commitment to AI infrastructure and technical talent.
That’s up from $21.4 billion in Q4 2025 alone, which already represented a 48% increase year over year. Operating margin declined to 41% from 48% as total costs rose 40% year over year.