Meta Platforms (META) has entered one of its most turbulent phases in recent years. The stock is now down roughly 30% from its 52-week high of $796.25, wiping off more than $100 billion in market value. But this selloff isnโt triggered by one issue alone. A wave of legal setbacks, layoffs, and aggressive artificial intelligence (AI) spending has rattled investor confidence. While Meta navigates a complex transition from a high-margin social media business to a capital-intensive AI company, investors are wondering whether to buy, hold, or sell the stock right now.
Metaโs legal setbacks have caught the marketโs attention. According to Reuters, the Los Angeles jury found the company accountable for addictive platform design, while a separate New Mexico ruling levied a $375 million penalty over child safety violations. While the minimal fines wonโt put a dent in Metaโs financials, the biggest concern is these decisions could open the floodgates to thousands of similar lawsuits. META stock dipped sharply by almost 8% on March 26 and is down 21% year-to-date (YTD), compared to the tech-led Nasdaq Composite Index ($NASX) fall of 9.7%.
Besides this, Meta continues to face long-standing regulatory scrutiny on whether it has built an illegal monopoly through acquisitions like Instagram and WhatsApp.
At the same time, Meta has announced an aggressive restructuring plan that includes laying off 700 to 1,000 employees. But these layoffs are happening while the company pays massive executive compensation packages, which Meta is being criticized for. While the legal issues add uncertainty, Metaโs business fundamentals remain robust. Meta generated $200.1 billion in revenue in 2025 with $60.4 billion in net income. At the end of 2025, it held $81.6 billion in cash balance along with $43.6 billion in free cash flow. Its debt-to-equity ratio remains low at 0.27. The social media giantโs underlying business model remains strong, with more than 3.5 billion daily users across its platforms.
However, the biggest concern for investors now is that Metaโs cost of AI ambition is exploding.
Metaโs AI spending is exploding, with plans toย spend as much as $162 billion to $169 billion in 2026, largely driven by AI investments. It is also ramping up infrastructure spending dramatically, including a new AI data center project in Texas that might cost up to $10 billion. Additionally, it is offering massive compensation packages to attract top AI talent to build its own chipsย in the AI arms race against rivals Microsoft (MSFT), Alphabet (GOOG) (GOOGL), and Amazon (AMZN). These investments will pay off in the long run, but investors are concerned about short-term margin pressure. A classic example of this is Metaโs Reality Labs (RL) segment. Meta has been heavily investing in the metaverse segment, expecting it to eventually generate profits.