Meta set to report Q3 earnings after the bell

Meta set to report Q3 earnings after the bell


Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive officer of Meta Platforms Inc., arrives for the Meta Connect event in Menlo Park, California, US, on Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2024. 

David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Meta is slated to report third-quarter earnings on Wednesday after the close of regular trading.

Here’s what analysts polled by LSEG are expecting:

  • Earnings per share: $5.25
  • Revenue: $40.29 billion

Meta shares are up almost 70% this year and trading near a record, boosted by a string of strong earnings reports. The company’s gains on Wall Street have benefited Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who earlier in October surpassed Amazon founder Jeff Bezos as the world’s second-richest person for the first time, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

Zuckerberg has been pointing to Meta’s massive investments into artificial intelligence, which includes spending billions of dollars on Nvidia’s popular graphics processing units, as helping improve the company’s core online ad business in the aftermath of Apple’s 2021 iOS privacy update.

With Meta in July reporting its fourth straight quarter of sales growth above 20%, investors remain optimistic about the company’s overall financial health. Bernstein analysts said in a research note last week that Meta replaced Alphabet as the firm’s “set-it-and-forget-it blue chip holding” because of the company’s “healthy core business” and its low-risk AI strategy.

Meta’s results come a day after digital ad companies Alphabet, Reddit and Snap all reported solid quarterly earnings. Microsoft reports after the bell on Wednesday, and the big week for tech earnings wraps up on Thursday, when Apple and Amazon report quarterly financials.

One possible concern for Meta could be slowing revenue growth.

If Meta hits analysts’ expectations for third-quarter revenue, that would represent 18% year-over-year growth, down from 23% a year ago. At that time, Meta was heavily benefiting from the massive digital ad spending from China-linked retailers like Temu and Shein, and it’s unclear how long those companies will continue their digital marketing blitzes.

Meta shows durability despite potential near-term volatility, says Bernstein's Mark Shmulik

In February, Meta reported fourth-quarter revenue that was up 25% year-over-year, and in April, the company’s first-quarter revenue was up 27% from a year earlier. Besting those marks will be a “tough bar” for the company, said Angelo Zino, vice president and technology equity research analyst at CFRA. Investors will be eager to see guidance.

“You kind of look at that and you wonder, is that going to be sustained?” Zino said.

Meanwhile, Meta continues investing heavily in its Reality Labs hardware division. The company’s strong online advertising business and previous rounds of major layoffs in 2022 and 2023 have helped quell the concerns of anxious investors, but Reality Labs’ expenses of $4.8 billion in the second quarter dwarfed the $353 million it generated in sales.  

Zuckerberg’s showcase of the company’s Orion AR prototype AR glasses in September was viewed as a success by his employees, and Meta plans to court software developers in 2025 as it works toward a consumer version of the headset, CNBC reported earlier this month.

The excitement and buzz around Meta’s prototype Orion AR glasses and how they fit into the company’s long-term strategy seems to have eclipsed that of Apple and its competing Vision Pro VR headset, which debuted early this year at a starting price of $3,500, said Barton Crockett, managing director and senior research analyst at Rosenblatt Securities.

“The Orion shows a vision that’s interesting, and they’ve executed a lot better than Apple, which is something that nobody would have believed was possible,” Crockett said.

Meta also hopes to build off the excitement of its Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses, which it develops in partnership with EssilorLuxottica. Crockett noted that because of the positive reaction to the Ray-Ban Meta glasses, those devices “could be a popular gift this Christmas.”

WATCH: Meta’s revenue has room to run despite all their AI spending.

Meta's revenue has room to run despite all their AI spending, says Jefferies' Brent Thill



Source

Behind Anthropic’s stunning growth is a sibling team that may hold the key to generative AI
Technology

Behind Anthropic’s stunning growth is a sibling team that may hold the key to generative AI

SAN FRANCISCO — Daniela Amodei has an energy that’s hard to place — warm, unhurried, immediately present. She swept into a sunlit room on the ground floor of Anthropic’s headquarters in December, sat down, and immediately apologized for her mug. “Is my, like, gigantic novelty mug going to be distracting if I have it?” she […]

Read More
Are we in an AI bubble? What 40 tech leaders and analysts are saying, in one chart
Technology

Are we in an AI bubble? What 40 tech leaders and analysts are saying, in one chart

Are we in an artificial intelligence bubble? It’s the debate that dominated the tech industry in 2025, and it’s not going away anytime soon. Record valuations and deals driven by major investments in artificial intelligence have fueled the AI boom, leaving some to brace for the potential burst. AI leaders like OpenAI and Nvidia have […]

Read More
Oracle announces departure of two oldest directors, narrowing board to 12
Technology

Oracle announces departure of two oldest directors, narrowing board to 12

George Conrades, then chairman and CEO of Akamai Technologies, listens during a meeting of the National Infrastructure Advisory Council in Washington on April 13, 2004. Jay Mallin | Bloomberg | Getty Images Oracle said Friday that two longtime directors, both octogenarians, have resigned from the board. George Conrades, former CEO of content network distribution company […]

Read More