
Billion-Dollar Bonfire: Meta Keeps Pouring Cash Into the Metaverse and AI
Meta just dropped its latest earnings report, and the numbers are wild. If you thought Mark Zuckerberg was done spending money on the metaverse, think again. Reality Labs, the wing of the company that builds VR headsets and AR glasses, lost another $4 billion this past quarter. At this point, seeing a multibillion-dollar loss from this division feels as normal as the sun rising in the east. Since 2021, Meta has burned through a total of $83.5 billion on this project. That averages out to about $4 billion every single quarter for years.
While the metaverse remains a massive money pit, Meta is shifting its focus toward a new, even more expensive obsession: artificial intelligence. As the company pulls back slightly from its wildest metaverse dreams, it is ramping up spending on AI infrastructure to levels that make the Reality Labs losses look like pocket change. Meta now projects it will spend between $125 billion and $145 billion in 2026 alone. This massive jump in spending caught analysts by surprise, as it far exceeds earlier estimates.
Paying for the AI Brain
Mark Zuckerberg explained to investors that this spending spree is necessary to keep up with rivals like OpenAI and Google. The price of building the hardware and data centers needed for high-level AI is sky-high, thanks to the rising cost of memory and specialized chips. To fuel this push, Meta has been on a hiring tear. Last year, the company successfully poached 50 top AI researchers and engineers from its competitors. This talent helped Meta launch its newest AI model, Muse Spark, earlier this month.
The problem for investors is that while Meta is making more money than ever, it is also spending it faster than ever. In the first quarter of this year, Meta brought in $36.5 billion in revenue and a net income of $11.6 billion. Even though those numbers are great, the stock price actually dropped over 10% in after-hours trading because people are worried about the massive bill for AI. Investors wanted to hear that spending would eventually slow down, but Meta gave them the opposite news.
A Future with No Price Tag
When asked about the budget for 2027, Meta’s leadership didn’t have much of an answer. Meta CFO Susan Li told investors that the company is in a “dynamic planning process” and cannot give a specific number for future spending. She admitted that the company has consistently underestimated how much computing power it actually needs. This suggests that the billion-dollar bonfire isn’t going to go out anytime soon.
Meta is betting that building an AI “superintelligence” will pay off in the long run, even if the road there is paved with billions of dollars in losses. The company claims that AI use is already growing across its apps, but keeping those systems running is only getting more expensive. For now, Meta has the cash to keep this gamble going, but investors are clearly losing their patience with the endless spending. Whether this bet turns Meta into the king of AI or just leaves them with a giant pile of expensive hardware remains to be seen.







