According to a report from Financial timesFacebook parent Meta (META) is building an artificial intelligence robot that looks like its CEO, Mark Zuckerberg. The robot, which will become an internal tool for providing feedback and ideas to employees, will be trained on Zuckerberg’s public appearances, tone, thoughts on company strategy and mannerisms. The initiative is aligned with the company’s broader ambitions to develop photorealistic 3D avatars that can interact in real time.
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This development is not new to the Meta group. In 2024, the company’s AI Studio platform allowed creators to create AI versions of themselves to communicate with their fan bases via direct messages. While that didn’t improve, naysayers should take note of another noteworthy development in the interim.
Last month, Meta acquired Moltbook, a social media platform for generative AI platforms. Built over a weekend using vibration coding by Matt Schlicht and Ben Parr, it had 2.3 million AI agents on its platform in the first few weeks. With over 700,000 posts and 12 million comments, Moltbook had captured the imagination of the AI world.
However, their fall was as rapid as their rise, as the humans abandoned the platform. A major security breach that exposed more than a million credentials and 6,000 email addresses didn’t help matters either. Therefore, Meta’s acquisition of the company certainly raised eyebrows.
But if we dig deeper, Meta has now brought in a duo that has deep experience in the attention economy. Now part of the Meta Superintelligence Labs (MSL) led by Alex Wang, Moltbook’s co-founders are expected to be valuable additions to MSL. While Schlicht was the CEO of Octane AI, a platform that used AI to help e-commerce brands and was famous for growing rapper Lil Wayne’s Facebook following to over 30 million in a short span of time, before Moltbook, Ben Parr was the co-publisher and managing editor of the global media and entertainment platform, Mashable.
Coming back to “ZuckBot”, the development should not be viewed in isolation, as in combination with Moltbook, there may be some interesting things to look forward to.
For example, this creates an opportunity for a completely new business service. Meta can use Zuckerberg’s clone as a proof of concept to sell corporate digital twins to other large companies. While avatars handle human interaction, the Moltbook infrastructure acts as a registry where these corporate robots can securely verify identities and coordinate tasks. This transforms what could be a simple chatbot upgrade into a full-fledged business operating system.
The shareholder value proposition is also exciting. Today, Meta relies heavily on consumer advertising. Entering the enterprise software space opens up a new revenue stream. Enterprise software companies typically trade at higher valuation multiples due to predictable subscription models. Furthermore, the internal deployment of this technology justifies the $135 billion in capital expenditures projected by 2026. By demonstrating that its huge infrastructure investments have tangible business applications outside the metaverse, Meta can generate investor confidence.
Meta delivered another strong set of financial results in the fourth quarter of 2025, returning to form after a one-time tax-related earnings miss in the previous quarter.
Revenue reached $59.9 billion, up 24% year over year, supported by a 6% increase in average price per ad. Earnings per share rose 11% to $8.88, beating the Street consensus of $8.21. Over the last nine quarters, Meta beat earnings estimates in eight of them.
The long-term track record remains impressive, with revenue and earnings compounding at annual rates of 27.34% and 32.27%, respectively, over the past decade.
Notably, daily actives across the entire app family grew 7% year-over-year to $3.58 billion, while operating cash flow for the quarter stood at $36.2 billion. The company ended December with $81.6 billion in cash and equivalents, significantly higher than its short-term debt of $2.2 billion and even higher than its long-term debt of approximately $59 billion, reflecting the strength of its balance sheet.
In terms of guidance for the first quarter of 2026, Meta guided revenue to a range of between $53.5 billion and $56.5 billion. At the midpoint, this implies approximately 30% year-on-year growth.
However, the high valuation remains a cause for concern. The Forward P/E of 20.89, P/S of 6.35, and P/CF of 11.74 are all above the industry medians of 13.76, 1.18, and 7.36. However, the Forward PEG ratio of 0.94 is below the industry median of 1.14, suggesting that META stock looks relatively attractive when growth is considered.
Valued at a market cap of $1.6 trillion, META stock is down 0.35% year-to-date (YTD).
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Thus, analysts have assigned a “Strong Buy” consensus rating to META shares, with an average price target of $856.25. This denotes an upside potential of around 29% from current levels. Of the 56 analysts covering the stock, 45 have a “Strong Buy” rating, three have a “Moderate Buy” rating, and eight have a “Hold” rating.
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On the date of publication, Pathikrit Bose had no (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article are for informational purposes only. This article was originally published on Barchart.com