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Meta headquarters exterior with logo sign, reflecting company under scrutiny amid major social media legal challenges.
Meta headquarters exterior with logo sign, reflecting company under scrutiny amid major social media legal challenges.
  • Meta Platforms made headlines after courts in New Mexico and California issued legal rulings against the company.

  • Despite paying damages in California that are a rounding error compared to Meta’s financials, the case introduces real risk ahead.

  • Still, Morgan Stanley remains confident in the stock, naming Meta a “top pick.”

  • Interested in Meta Platforms, Inc.? Here are five stocks we like better.

The legal system just sent a shockwave through shares of the Magnificent Seven giant Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META). The company lost two cases, one in New Mexico and another in California, leading shares to take significant hits.

For a company of Meta’s size, the nearly $400 million in damages the company will pay is table stakes. However, markets are fretting over the longer-term implications of these rulings.

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Meta’s legal troubles are not something that investors should brush aside. They could lead to further substantial damage. Possibly more threatening is the negative sentiment that could pressure Meta shares should the company continue to lose cases. This comes as many market participants are already skeptical of the massive artificial intelligence (AI) CapEx spending at Big Tech companies.

New Mexico ordered Meta to pay $375 million in civil penalties, finding the company liable for “misleading consumers about the safety of its platforms and endangering children.” Meanwhile, a California jury found Meta and Google parent company Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL) liable for $6 million in damages in a social media addiction case. Meta will bear 70% of the burden, leading to a $4.2 million payment.

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Despite the larger payment involved in the New Mexico case, markets clearly seem much more concerned about the precedent set in California.

Notably, the day after the California verdict, Meta shares dropped nearly 8%. This compares to the nearly 2% drop seen after the New Mexico verdict.

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This is largely because experts consider the California case a “bellwether.” As NPR notes, “It represents the first time a jury has found that social media apps should be treated as defective products for being engineered to exploit the developing brains of kids and teenagers.”

Due to the novel nature of the case, it opens the door to the company losing thousands of other similar cases. There are currently around 2,000 pending cases relying on similar legal interpretations to those used in California.

Theoretically, if Meta were to lose 2,000 cases and pay $4.2 million in each, the firm would rack up $8.4 billion in damages. That would be far from insignificant, equal to around 17% of the $46.1 billion in free cash flow the company generated in 2025. This doesn’t include the large legal fees that Meta could accumulate while defending itself or the likely possibility that other parties will bring even more cases against the firm.

Meta expects to spend between $115 billion and $135 billion on capital expenditures in 2026 to support its AI goals. Amid this spending, which should put significant pressure on free cash flow, the last thing the company needs is to lose billions on legal cases.

Ultimately, investors will have to wait and see whether future cases will repeat the ruling reached in California. However, should the company face more legal losses, it could put significant downward pressure on shares. Still, Meta plans to appeal both rulings. If successful, this could provide a defense against pending and potential cases.

An even greater threat is that these cases could lead Congress to reevaluate Section 230 immunity. Section 230 has been key to social media companies avoiding legal scrutiny based on content posted to their platforms. Federal legislators, with support from both sides of the aisle, have proposed a bill to sunset this protection. Doing so could open up Meta and Google to much higher levels of legal exposure.

Still, in relation to the California case, this proposal isn’t particularly relevant. The legal theory used was specifically designed to circumvent Section 230 immunity, not directly challenge it.

MarketBeat has tracked just one Wall Street analyst price target update since these cases concluded. Brian Nowak at Morgan Stanley lowered his Meta price target by 6% to $775, a move that is somewhat consistent with the drop in shares.

Despite this, Nowak named Meta his latest “top pick,” saying the sentiment around the stock had reached a low point. Notably, Meta shares have recovered significantly from recent lows near $525. Nowak’s recommendation contributed to this. However, expectations that the conflict in Iran could soon end have been a larger driver, greatly boosting the market as a whole. Still, Nowak’s target implies more than 30% upside in shares.

Meta now trades at a forward price-to-earnings ratio near 22x, slightly below its three-year average of 23x. This comes even though the company is forecasting a 30% sales increase next quarter, which would mark its fastest growth rate in years.

Overall, a higher level of uncertainty now surrounds Meta Platforms’ stock, making it more difficult to assess its outlook. The company will have the opportunity to assuage investor fears in its next earnings report, slated for the end of April. This release marks a key point at which to reassess its future.

The article “Why Meta’s “Bellwether” Legal Loss Could Open up a Can of Worms” was originally published by MarketBeat.

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