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Meta saw a significant acceleration in its third-quarter revenue growth rate.
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AI is already a substantial contributor to the social media company’s strong financial momentum.
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Meta plans to spend more than $100 billion on capital expenditures next year, with much of that spending going toward AI compute.
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10 stocks we like better than Meta Platforms ›
Meta Platforms‘ (NASDAQ: META) shares have taken a beating in 2026. As of this writing, the stock is down about 8.5% year to date. And this adds to a rough patch at the end of 2025 as investors were spooked by the tech company’s big spending plans. Since the company’s third-quarter earnings report on Oct. 29, shares have slid about 20%.
With the stock losing about a fifth of its value in such a short period of time, this is a good time for investors to take a look at the growth stock to see if this is a buying opportunity or a sign of more problems to come.
It’s difficult to critique Meta’s recent business performance. As the parent company of Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Threads, and Meta AI, the business is not just growing rapidly, but it’s growing at an accelerating rate. Even more, its investments in AI (artificial intelligence) are already paying off.
Meta’s third-quarter revenue rose 26% year over year, accelerating from 22% in Q2 — and a huge part of this growth is from AI. Management said that its strong performance in its ads business in Q3 was largely due to improvements in its AI ranking systems. In fact, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg noted during the company’s third-quarter earnings call that the annual revenue run rate for its end-to-end AI-powered ad tools has now surpassed $60 billion. Additionally, the company is seeing explosive growth in user engagement for its AI assistant, Meta AI, which is used across its social media applications and even has its own app. The AI assistant already boasts more than 1 billion monthly active users, Zuckerberg noted.
The best news? Meta remains extremely profitable. Its income from operations in Q3 rose 18% year over year to $20.5 billion. In addition, free cash flow, which is the company’s cash flow from operations less capital expenditures, came in at nearly $11 billion in Q3 alone.
To top it all off, Meta trades at a very conservative valuation of 27 times earnings. And this valuation is even cheaper when measured by the stock’s forward price-to-earnings ratio, which looks at a stock’s valuation as a multiple of analysts’ consensus forecast for a company’s earnings over the next four quarters. Meta’s forward price-to-earnings ratio is just 21.










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