Meta stock plunges 6% after earnings leave investors disappointed

Meta stock plunges 6% after earnings leave investors disappointed
Utkarsh Roshan
Apr 29, 2026, 16:41 P.M.

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Meta ad ecosystem (GOOGL)

Buy GOOGL. If Meta’s user growth and engagement are pressured by regional disruptions, advertisers shift budgets toward other large ad platforms. Google’s search and YouTube ad inventory is less exposed to WhatsApp/DAP-specific issues, so it can capture share as Meta’s targeting/engagement softens. The second-order effect is ad dollars rotating from Meta to Google while the market focuses on Meta’s weakness. Key risk: Google’s ad growth slows too (macro ad budgets tighten) or regulators/competition limit share gains.

Key Risk: Overall ad spending contracts, overwhelming any share shift from Meta to Google.

Meta Platforms (META)

Sell META. The stock fell ~6% because the two things that matter most for the next leg—user growth and spending discipline—missed expectations. DAP was below Street forecasts and even declined quarter-over-quarter due to Iran/WhatsApp restrictions. Capex also came in far below estimates, yet guidance was raised, signaling cost pressure and execution risk as AI/data-center spend ramps. Key risk: a sharp rebound in DAP and ad demand in the next two quarters that proves the miss was temporary (and the raised capex is actually efficient).

Key Risk: User growth re-accelerates fast enough to erase the DAP miss and restore confidence in AI ROI.

  • Meta shares fall after user growth misses expectations.
  • Revenue beats estimates, but capex outlook raised sharply.
  • AI spending surge and infrastructure costs remain key focus.

Shares of Meta Platforms fell sharply in extended trading on Wednesday after the company reported mixed first-quarter results, with a miss on user growth and lower-than-expected capital expenditures overshadowing a revenue beat.

The stock dropped about 6% after hours. Meta shares had gained 1.4% year-to-date through Wednesday’s close in New York.

Revenue beats, user growth disappoints

Meta reported first-quarter revenue of $56.3 billion, exceeding analyst estimates of $55.45 billion, according to LSEG data.

However, user growth fell short of expectations. The company reported daily active people (DAP) of 3.56 billion, up 4% year-on-year but below the 3.62 billion projected by Wall Street.

Meta said there was a “slight decline in DAP on a quarter-over-quarter basis” due to “internet disruptions in Iran, as well as a restriction on access to WhatsApp in Russia.”

Adjusted earnings per share came in at $7.32, though the figure was not directly comparable with analyst estimates.

Capex miss, full-year outlook raised

Capital expenditures for the quarter totaled $19.84 billion, below the $27.57 billion average estimate, according to StreetAccount.

Despite the lower quarterly spend, Meta raised its full-year capital expenditure guidance to a range of $125 billion to $145 billion, up from a prior outlook of $115 billion to $135 billion.

The company said the increase reflects expectations for higher component costs and additional data centre investments to support future capacity.

“This reflects our expectations for higher component pricing this year and, to a lesser extent, additional data center costs to support future year capacity,” Meta said in its earnings statement.

AI spending remains central

Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg has previously indicated that Meta plans to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on AI infrastructure over the coming years.

The company has already entered into major agreements with chipmakers, including Nvidia, Advanced Micro Devices, and Broadcom, to secure hardware for its AI initiatives.

Meta is also building multiple large-scale data centres to support its growing AI workloads, even as rising component prices and supply chain pressures increase costs.

Meta maintained its full-year expense outlook at between $162 billion and $169 billion, indicating continued discipline despite rising investment in infrastructure.

The company expects second-quarter revenue to be in the range of $58 billion to $61 billion, compared with analyst expectations of $59.5 billion.

Headcount rose 1% year-on-year to 77,986 employees as of March 31.

Broader market context

Meta’s results come amid strong momentum in technology stocks, with the Nasdaq Composite up 14% for the month through Wednesday’s close, marking its best performance since April 2020.

Investor appetite for the sector has remained robust despite concerns that rising oil prices and supply chain disruptions linked to the Iran conflict could increase costs for AI infrastructure and data centre buildouts.