Meta Platforms Inc. (META) has been absolutely hammered lately, down 17% in the past month alone. The reason? Investors are treating the company's AI spending spree like a five-alarm fire. But here's the strange part: the stock is now trading at its lowest forward earnings multiple since 2022, when the entire market was imploding.
Wall Street analysts expect Meta to compound earnings at more than 15% annually for the next three years. So we've got a company with strong projected growth trading at distressed valuations. For bullish investors, that gap is the whole ballgame.
The Valuation Reset Nobody Saw Coming
Meta's forward P/E has collapsed to 19.7x, sitting well below its post-pandemic average of 23x. This is the kind of valuation zone you'd expect during serious market stress, not when a company is stabilizing revenue growth, improving Reels monetization and showing real cost discipline.
The market is still shell-shocked from last quarter's AI spending announcement and is pricing Meta like its growth story just hit a wall. But analysts following the company's multi-year earnings trajectory aren't buying it. The fundamentals look nothing like 2022.
The AI Spending Mess Is Actually Clearing Up
Sure, Meta's AI buildout has been expensive and messy. It's been harder to model than anything the company has thrown at Wall Street in a decade. But the spending curve is flattening, and more importantly, the returns are starting to materialize.
Llama adoption is accelerating. The GPU infrastructure is finally scaling to match the company's ambitions. And the new AI-powered ad tools are showing early evidence of improving advertiser ROI, which is the metric that actually drives long-term revenue growth.
Why the Bulls Think This Is an Overreaction
To bullish investors, this looks like a textbook mispricing: you've got double-digit earnings growth paired with a valuation that assumes everything is slowing down.
Maybe Meta spent too aggressively. Maybe Wall Street punished it too harshly. But these things don't stay misaligned forever. If earnings land anywhere close to that 15% growth target Wall Street is modeling, this valuation reset won't stick.
For now, the bulls see something straightforward: a mega-cap growth machine temporarily priced like it's running on empty.