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Meta reports mixed financial results amid spree of AI hiring and spending

about 19 hours ago
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Meta reported mixed financial results for the third quarter of 2025.The company brought in record quarterly revenue but reported a major tax bill that dampened earnings per share, the company announced on Wednesday.The financial results come as Meta ends a multibillion-dollar hiring spree focused on artificial intelligence talent.The tech giant earned $51.24bn in quarterly revenue, beating Wall Street expectations and the company’s own projections for third-quarter sales.

However, it reported earnings per share (EPS) of $1.05, far below Wall Street expectations of $6.70 in EPS.The major drop was due to a one-time non-cash income tax charge of $15.93bn.

The EPS would have been $7.25 without this one-time charge, the company said.The report, and the scheduled investor call, gives investors another opportunity to find out whether the company’s lavish spending on AI infrastructure is justified.The company projected full-year total expenses would be between $116m and $118bn, upping the lower end of the range from $114bn.The company also expects 2025 capital expenditures to be between $70bn and $72bn, up from a previously projected range of $66bn and $72bn.

Meta said its fourth-quarter revenue would likely fall somewhere between $56bn and $59bn.“We had a strong quarter for our business and our community,” said Mark Zuckerberg, Meta’s founder and CEO.“Meta Superintelligence Labs is off to a great start and we continue to lead the industry in AI glasses.If we deliver even a fraction of the opportunity ahead, then the next few years will be the most exciting period in our history.”Jesse Cohen, senior analyst at Investing.

com, said the latest report reveals “the growing tension between the company’s massive AI infrastructure investments and investor expectations for near-term returns”,Spending is not expected to slow down any time soon, however,On the earnings call, Susan Li, the company’s chief financial officer, said Meta will need to “invest aggressively” in 2026 to meet the company’s computational needs,Earlier this month, the company announced a new joint venture with Blue Owl Capital that would help the firms build and finance the new $27bn Hyperion data center campus in Louisiana, the biggest Meta is involved in developing,“We also anticipate total expenses will grow at a significantly faster percentage rate in 2026 than 2025, with growth driven primarily by infrastructure costs, including incremental cloud expenses and depreciation,” Li said.

“Employee compensation costs will be the second largest contributor to growth, as we recognize a full year of compensation for employees hired throughout 2025, particularly AI talent, and add technical talent in priority areas,”When asked about how the company is balancing releasing products that will show near-term returns on investment with these larger research-focused projects, Zuckerberg said that Meta AI is a “massive latent opportunity” and pointed to the company’s ability to bring its new products to billions of users,“The research is going to enable technological capabilities to exist and then those capabilities can get built into all kinds of different products,” Zuckerberg said,It’s the first financial update since Meta said it planned to lay off 600 staffers from its AI unit – the same unit the company went on a spending and hiring spree to restructure and fill with the top AI talent from other companies,The company said the layoffs were an effort to reduce the bloat within the company’s “super-intelligence” unit and brought the number of employees there down to just under 3,000.

Zuckerberg said the investment into Meta’s Superintelligence Labs helped the company build what he described as “the highest talent density lab in the industry at this point”.The company’s stock has been on a steady rise over the past six months.Its previous two earnings reports have beaten Wall Street expectations.The wider US stock market likewise reached record highs the week.Meta also launched its new Ray-Ban Display glasses last month, which feature a screen embedded in the lenses, and analysts were eager to hear sales figures.

But the unit responsible for these glasses as well as Meta’s virtual reality headsets posted a massive $4.4bn loss.Zuckerberg said the company’s collaborations with Ray-Ban and Oakleys on these AI glasses were going well and that these investments will likely be very profitable.Meta’s original camera glasses, simply dubbed Meta Ray-Bans, proved to be a popular gadget.Both types of glasses have already prompted privacy concerns.

While Meta has designed the glasses not to work if a light that notifies people that the glasses are recording is covered, a $60 modification can disable the light, 404 Media reported.“I suspect these glasses, in particular, will predominantly appeal to early ‘tech-curious’ adopters, and that scheduled demos will far outpace sales,” said Mike Proulx, Forrester VP research director.On the advertising side, Meta lost its accreditation from the Media Rating Council, a non-profit that sets industry-wide standards for brand safety, after the company decided to pull out of the organization’s annual audits.The accreditation signals to advertisers that the content on the platform that their ads may appear next to would not be harmful to their brand.Meta received the accreditation just four months before it was stripped.

Analysts were optimistic that the loss of accreditation would not ultimately hurt Meta’s ability to attract advertisers.“While this may raise eyebrows among advertisers, it won’t deter them from investing in Meta due to its sheer audience reach and brand reliance,” Proulx said.“Brands will overlook potential brand-safety risks as long as their Meta media investments continue to perform.”
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Boris Johnson tells Tories to stop ‘bashing green agenda’ or risk losing next election

Boris Johnson has warned the Conservatives they will not win the next election by “bashing the green agenda”.The former prime minister said he had not seen the Conservatives “soaring in the polls as a result of saying what rubbish net zero is”.Johnson’s intervention comes after Theresa May and John Major criticised the Tories for speaking out against net zero, making him the third former prime minister to step in on this issue.Kemi Badenoch has committed the party to repealing the Climate Change Act and abandoning the commitment to reach net zero by 2050, arguing that the target threatens to bankrupt Britain.The repeal of the act would remove the need to meet “carbon budgets” – ceilings, set for five-year periods, on the amount of greenhouse gas that can be emitted – and disband the Climate Change Committee – a watchdog that advises on how policies affect the UK’s carbon footprint

about 16 hours ago
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Rachel Reeves admits breaking rules by renting out her house without a licence

Rachel Reeves has admitted to “inadvertently” breaking housing rules by renting out her south London home without the specific £945 licence required by the local council.The chancellor admitted the error to the prime minister, Keir Starmer, and to parliamentary ethics officers, after it was first disclosed by the Daily Mail.Reeves put her family home in Southwark up for rent after moving into No 11 Downing Street last year following Labour’s election victory.A spokesperson said the chancellor had used a letting agency to manage the process, and that while she should have been aware of the obligation to buy the licence, she had not been advised that she needed one.“She had not been made aware of the licensing requirement, but as soon as it was brought to her attention she took immediate action and has applied for the licence,” Reeves’s spokesperson said

about 17 hours ago
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‘The novelty will wear off’: Labour hopes publicity will be Farage’s downfall

After Nigel Farage dominated the summer headlines with weekly press conferences while his rivals were on their sunloungers and the news agenda was light, Labour strategists swore they would never let it happen again.Labour MPs had returned to Westminster after recess, fuming that the government had vacated the public arena and allowed Reform UK to shape the narrative to the extent that the mood hardened against Keir Starmer.“People in their constituencies have been getting terrible feedback. Farage has been everywhere,” one MP said at the time. “The mood was: this has been a fucking disaster

about 20 hours ago
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Farage reclaims centre stage as Reform’s Sarah Pochin keeps the world at bay

Sarah Pochin is unwell. She hasn’t been seen for days. Not at any of the three Reform press conferences on three consecutive days this week. It’s not as if Reform has so many MPs to go round that her presence wouldn’t be missed. The last Sarah sighting was on TalkTV last Saturday where she could be spotted frantically counting the number of black and Asian actors in adverts

about 22 hours ago
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Racism, intent and the diversity in TV adverts | Letters

The “now you see it, now you don’t”, “was it or wasn’t it” racism of recent days is nothing new, but it is profoundly dispiriting and corrosive (Nigel Farage defends MP’s complaint about TV adverts as ‘ugly’ but not ‘deliberately’ racist, 27 October). It reduces racism to a prejudice that leaks, unintentionally, out of clumsy words.Similar excuses were made after Frank Hester said Diane Abbott “makes you want to hate all black women” and that she “should be shot”, and after Robert Jenrick complained about not seeing “another white face” during his tour of part of Birmingham. Both said that their remarks had nothing to do with skin colour.The sad fact is that racism is not the preserve of self-declared Nazis advocating white supremacy with intent

about 23 hours ago
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MPs vote down Farage’s proposal for UK to leave ECHR – as it happened

The result is in. Nigel Farage was defeated by 154 votes to 96, a majority of 58.The vote is not particularly meaningful. The main parties were not whipping their MPs, and so the numbers do not say anything significant about opinion in the Commons on leaving the ECHR.The only parties in the Commons that clearly favour ECHR withdrawal are the Conservatives (119 MPs), Reform UK (5 MPs), and TUV (1 MP)

about 23 hours ago
businessSee all
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Business and charity leaders urge ministers to lead England’s transition to four-day week

about 10 hours ago
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‘Patients will suffer’: tales from the frontline of the UK pharma crisis

about 11 hours ago
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Pound sinks against euro and dollar as tax rises loom and growth slows

about 21 hours ago
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Fed cuts interest rates for second time this year amid economic uncertainty

about 21 hours ago
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EU carmakers ‘days away’ from halting work as chip war with China escalates

about 23 hours ago
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Wall Street hits new highs as Nvidia becomes world’s first $5tn company – as it happened

1 day ago