Meta Platforms: A Split Decision Driven by AI and Investor Demand

Generado por agente de IAIsaac Lane
martes, 8 de julio de 2025, 5:46 am ET2 min de lectura
GOOGL--
META--

Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META) is approaching a pivotal moment. With its stock price nearing $700—a level where peers like AppleAAPL-- and Alphabet have historically split their shares—the social media giant is under pressure to make its shares more accessible to retail investors. But this isn't just about affordability. Meta's AI-driven growth, undervalued relative to its peers, and a retail ownership stake of 28%—unusually high for a tech titan—suggest the company is primed for a stock split that could supercharge its appeal. Here's why investors should act now.

The Split's Timing and Valuation Case

Meta's current valuation—29x trailing earnings and 20x forward earnings—remains reasonable for a company growing at 19% annually in revenue (Q3 2024) and 37% in EPS. Yet its $700+ share price risks alienating retail investors, who already hold nearly a third of its float. A stock split would lower the per-share price, likely boosting liquidity and reducing volatility.


Peer splits have historically followed a pattern: Apple split at $500 in 2020, Alphabet at $2,000 in 2022. MetaMETA-- is now at the lower end of this threshold, and with its AI investments and metaverse ambitions, its trajectory suggests a split is inevitable.

Retail Investors Are the Catalyst

Retail ownership at 27–28% is staggering for a company of Meta's scale. By comparison, Alphabet and MicrosoftMSFT-- each have <10% retail ownership. A split would likely draw even more retail interest, as seen with Tesla's 2020 split, which triggered a 120% post-split rally. Meta's 2025 Q1 earnings, which grew 35% in net income to $16.6 billion, underscore its capacity to sustain this momentum.


A split would also signal confidence in Meta's AI roadmap. The company's Llama series, now powering its ad targeting and metaverse platforms, is already driving revenue. In Q4 2024, AI-enabled ad sales grew 22%, outpacing traditional ads.

AI: The Undervalued Growth Engine

Meta's AI investments are often overlooked in its valuation. The $16 billion it spent in 2024 on AI and metaverse development—30% of its cash reserves—is a bet on becoming the go-to platform for enterprise AI tools and consumer metaverse experiences. Competitors like AmazonAMZN-- and GoogleGOOGL-- are racing to catch up, but Meta's scale and user data give it a leg up.


Analysts estimate AI could add $20 billion to Meta's ad revenue by 2026, yet its valuation still lags peers. At $1 trillion, it's half the size of Alphabet and behind Microsoft. A stock split would make this undervaluation more apparent to retail investors, potentially igniting a buying frenzy.

Risks and Why They're Manageable

Regulatory headwinds, particularly the EU's Digital Markets Act, and AI execution risks are valid concerns. But Meta's $70 billion cash pile and $16 billion annual free cash flow provide a cushion. Meanwhile, its AI initiatives are already paying off: Llama's performance in benchmarks surpasses rivals, and its metaverse platform Horizon Worlds has doubled its user base in 2025.

The Bottom Line: Act Before the Split Amplifies Demand

Meta's stock split is a “when,” not “if,” scenario. Investors who wait for the split announcement may miss out on the pre-split buying wave. With its AI-driven growth undervalued, retail-friendly fundamentals, and a split likely in 2025, now is the time to buy.


The split will lower its per-share price to ~$30–$60, making it irresistible to retail traders. But the real value lies in its AI playbook: a platform with 3.9 billion monthly active users, a $160 billion ad market, and the tools to dominate the next wave of AI-driven innovation.

In the words of Warren Buffett: “Be fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful.” Meta's stock is neither—yet. Act now before the split sparks a retail-driven rally.

This analysis is based on public financial data and industry trends. Always conduct your own research before making investment decisions.

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