NEW YORK, Feb 8, 2026, 09:42 EST — The market has closed.
- Meta slipped in the previous session, bucking a broader rebound across U.S. stocks.
- Big Tech’s AI spending binge has investors parsing what all this might do to margins by 2026.
- Europe’s latest drive to limit minors’ access to social media throws an extra complication into the mix.
Meta Platforms Inc (META) dropped 1.3% to close at $661.46 on Friday, after fluctuating from $646.63 up to $673.00. The stock moved as tech shares struggled to regain some footing after a rough week.
On Monday, the stock faces a market less interested in shiny new features and more concerned about the growing tab. That planned $600 billion AI spending spree from Big Tech in 2026? It’s putting fresh pressure on profit projections and stirring anxiety among software and data firms further down the pipeline. Andrew Wells, chief investment officer at SanJac Alpha, summed it up as “a de-risking trade.” 1
For Meta, the stakes are getting real. Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Meta together are staring at a projected $630 billion AI tab this year. Meta alone has warned that capital expenditure—think servers, data centers—could hit $135 billion. 2
“The market is no longer tolerating spending for spending’s sake,” said Mark Hawtin, head of global equities at Liontrust. Investors want to see more concrete evidence that putting money to work actually boosts return on invested capital — essentially, how much profit each dollar really brings in. 3
Friday brought a quieter session, though the debate hardly went away. The Dow managed to finish above 50,000 for the first time ever. S&P 500 and Nasdaq? Both up roughly 2%, with money rotating back into tech—especially semis—after the AI-driven rout earlier in the week. 4
Setting aside capital expenditures, Meta is under increasing political heat over kids’ use of social media. Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis voiced support this day for barring children under 15 from the platforms, saying, “We must protect our children.” 5
Germany’s conservative bloc, led by Chancellor Friedrich Merz, is considering measures that would block anyone under 16 from using social media platforms, according to Bild. The proposed motion specifically mentions TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook—Meta’s properties. “In many places, social media is a collection of hate and fake news,” said CDU’s Dennis Radtke. 6
Turkey is moving toward tighter controls as well. A parliamentary report has urged measures like age checks and content filters, and Reuters says a draft law is in the pipeline. 7
Yet for Meta, the immediate risk boils down to this: as AI investments ramp up, if those hefty costs don’t show up in fatter revenue or margins, shares could end up stuck trading on whatever mood investors have about spending—regardless of what’s happening with ad demand.
This week, investors have their eyes on fresh U.S. numbers that could shake up rate bets and big tech valuations—first up, the January jobs report lands Wednesday, Feb. 11, followed by the CPI print for January on Friday, Feb. 13. 8