Key Takeaways
- Shares of Meta Platforms declined approximately 6% following a Financial Times article suggesting a multibillion-dollar equity offering to support artificial intelligence infrastructure investments
- The social media giant dismissed the claims as “pure speculation,” confirming no investment banks have been engaged for any stock sale
- The company’s projected 2026 capital spending ranges from $125 billion to $145 billion, approximately twice its $72 billion expenditure in 2025
- As of March 31, Meta’s outstanding long-term debt reached approximately $59 billion, while its buyback initiative remains on hold
- The tech giant unveiled a $115 million workforce development initiative, “America’s Workforce Academy,” designed to create skilled data center technicians
Meta Platforms experienced a roughly 6% decline in share value on Friday, June 5, following a Financial Times piece indicating the company may be considering issuing new equity—potentially valued at tens of billions of dollars—to finance its growing artificial intelligence infrastructure needs.
The company responded swiftly to the claims. A Meta representative characterized the article as “pure speculation,” clarifying that no financial institutions have been retained and that the company is merely evaluating various capital-raising options.
Nevertheless, the timing proved problematic for META shares, which have already declined roughly 11% since the beginning of the year, underperforming compared to other major technology companies.
Understanding the infrastructure investment surge
Meta’s capital investment trajectory is accelerating dramatically. The organization allocated approximately $72 billion throughout 2025. Subsequently, during its April first-quarter earnings announcement, leadership increased its 2026 spending forecast to a range of $125 billion to $145 billion—essentially doubling the previous year’s investment.
First-quarter capital expenditures alone totaled approximately $20 billion, significantly exceeding the $12.4 billion in free cash flow generated during that same three-month period.
To finance this expansion, Meta has increasingly relied on borrowed capital. Outstanding long-term debt reached roughly $59 billion at the end of March. In May, the company closed another $25 billion senior notes transaction. Additionally, Meta suspended its stock repurchase initiative, which had been active since 2017.
Chief Financial Officer Susan Li addressed the suspension during Meta’s Q4 2025 earnings discussion: “Share repurchase levels will vary from time to time for a lot of reasons, including whether we believe there are areas that have a greater near-term need for capital.”
First-quarter 2026 revenue increased 33% compared to the prior year, reaching $56.3 billion—marking the strongest expansion rate since 2021. Operating income advanced 30%. While core business performance remains solid, spending increases are outstripping revenue gains.
“Our experience so far has been that we have continued to underestimate our compute needs even as we have been ramping capacity,” Li stated during the first-quarter earnings call.
Comparing Meta’s position to Alphabet’s recent move
The Financial Times article surfaced mere days after Alphabet executed an approximately $85 billion equity transaction to support its artificial intelligence ambitions. That offering reportedly attracted strong investor demand and was ultimately increased in size. Alphabet’s shares have surged more than 115% during the past year, allowing the company to raise capital from a favorable market position.
Meta faces different circumstances. Issuing stock at present valuation levels means increased ownership dilution per dollar obtained. An equity raise worth tens of billions, measured against Meta’s approximately $1.5 trillion market capitalization, would likely produce low single-digit percentage dilution for current shareholders.
Data center workforce initiative
In a separate announcement, Meta revealed a $115 million commitment to establish “America’s Workforce Academy,” a new training initiative focused on developing data center technician expertise. The program offers no-cost training to participants and culminates in guaranteed employment opportunities with contractors supporting Meta’s data center construction projects.
The Associated Builders and Contractors organization indicated it anticipates training thousands of individuals throughout the program’s duration. This effort represents one component of Meta’s broader commitment to deploy $600 billion toward U.S. infrastructure and employment opportunities during the next three years.
As an illustration: a forthcoming Meta data center facility in Texas is expected to require more than 1,800 workers during construction’s busiest phase, though only approximately 100 permanent positions will remain once operational.
Meta’s augmented and virtual reality division continues recording multibillion-dollar quarterly losses, while its artificial intelligence model launches have reportedly encountered challenges.



