Meta Platforms shares fell more than 6% in extended trading after the company increased its annual capital spending forecast, signalling more investment in artificial intelligence infrastructure.

The Facebook and Instagram parent projected 2026 capital expenditure between USD 125 billion and USD 145 billion, an increase from its prior forecast of USD 115 billion to USD 135 billion.
The company also warned that legal and regulatory blowback in the European Union and the U.S. "could significantly impact our business and financial results," following years of criticism about children's safety on social media.
Meta stated, "We continue to see scrutiny on youth-related issues and have additional trials scheduled for this year in the U.S., which may ultimately result in a material loss."
The organisation faces a rising number of teen social media bans globally, as well as thousands of court cases by individuals, municipalities, states, and school districts. These lawsuits accuse Meta of designing addictive platforms harmful to children.
Several high-stakes court cases are due in the coming months, including the second part of a landmark New Mexico trial and a California case. The California case is expected to test claims central to nearly 2,000 similar lawsuits filed by U.S. school districts.
Meta reported its first-ever quarterly decline in Daily Active People (DAP) since it started using that metric to measure user numbers across its social media platforms. The company attributed this decline to internet disruptions in Iran and restrictions on WhatsApp access in Russia.
Daily active people grew 4% year-over-year in the first quarter to 3.56 billion.
Analyst Matt Britzman of Hargreaves Lansdown said Meta's higher capital spending spooked investors. He believes this is likely overblown, reflecting more expensive memory prices rather than changes to Meta's investment plan.
The results come weeks after Reuters first reported Meta's plans for sweeping layoffs, as Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg attempts to aggressively integrate AI into the company's workflows and reshape its workforce around the technology.
The company is planning further layoffs in the second half of the year, sources have told Reuters. Meta is also installing new tracking software on U.S.-based employees’ computers to capture mouse movements, clicks, and keystrokes to train its AI models.
This forms part of a broad initiative to build AI agents that can perform work tasks autonomously, Reuters reported last week.
Chief Financial Officer Susan Li confirmed the May layoffs on a conference call after reporting the financial results.
Li stated, "We don't really know what the optimal size of a company will be in the future. I think there's a lot of change right now, with AI capabilities advancing rapidly."
On the same call, Zuckerberg described tiny teams using AI to make products that previously would have taken dozens of people months to finish.
He said he wanted to build "the next evolution of our company around these people." This means investing in top-tier infrastructure, increasing rewards for heavy hitters, and streamlining teams so they are not bigger than they need to be.
Meta stated its workforce at the end of March was 77,986 people, up 1% from the same period last year but down from 78,865 at the end of December.
Reflecting anticipated savings, Meta kept its forecast for total 2026 expenses unchanged despite the projected rise in capital expenditure this year.
The company reported first-quarter revenue of USD 56.31 billion, beating the LSEG-compiled analysts' average estimate of USD 55.45 billion.
It expects second-quarter revenue of USD 58 billion to USD 61 billion, largely in line with estimates of USD 59.5 billion.
Managing director Gil Luria of D.A. Davidson noted that Meta’s results met expectations but "failed to impress investors, especially in the context of much stronger results from Google."
Luria added that investors were also concerned Meta's spending plans rose without a corresponding reduction in operating expenses.
Meta increased its annual capital spending forecast to between USD 125 billion and USD 145 billion for 2026.
Shares fell more than 6% following concerns about AI infrastructure investment and legal scrutiny.
The company faces legal and regulatory blowback in the EU and U.S. over youth safety and addictive platforms.
Source: REUTERS

