New York, Feb 16, 2026, 15:36 EST — The session has ended.
- Meta ended the session at $639.77, slipping 1.6% before trading resumes Tuesday.
- The UK signaled it might push ahead swiftly with a social media ban for those under 16, and also look at stricter rules for AI chatbots.
- Investors, uneasy, are questioning if Big Tech’s aggressive AI outlays will deliver returns quickly enough.
Meta Platforms (META.O) slipped around 1.6% to finish Friday at $639.77, with investors bracing for a final policy headline ahead of the holiday break. (Reuters)
Britain may roll out an Australian-style social media ban for under-16s as soon as this year, according to government officials, with proposals expected before June. Technology minister Liz Kendall voiced worries on Times Radio: “I am concerned about these AI chatbots… about the impact that’s having on children and young people.” The government is also moving to tighten rules around one-to-one chatbot use. (Reuters)
The timing isn’t great for the sector. This year, several of the world’s priciest technology stocks have seen sharp drops in market value, Reuters noted, as investors start to doubt whether hefty bets on AI can actually justify the lofty price tags. (Reuters)
Meta faces the prospect of stricter youth regulations in a key market, amplifying the ongoing tension between pumping out new growth tools and addressing safety concerns on Instagram and Facebook. With no fresh earnings in the pipeline this week, traders are quick to jump on regulatory developments as actionable catalysts—especially when sentiment is already driving the stock.
Debt markets aren’t sitting this one out. A separate Reuters piece on “AI hyperscalers”—the big data center operators like Meta, Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Oracle—flagged growing demand for “covenant-light” bonds. Credit analysts noted investors are reaching for these bonds, which offer fewer protections, just as AI-driven borrowing is taking off. (Reuters)
Chips aren’t the only concern; power demand keeps cropping up for investors, too. Analysts say PJM Interconnection’s new approach to surging data-center electricity needs might speed up direct partnerships between data-center owners and power suppliers. One analyst went so far as to forecast “a flurry” of power agreements in the months ahead. Reuters also highlighted a Constellation Energy arrangement with Meta, which is linked to extending a nuclear plant’s life by another twenty years. (Reuters)
Policy risks aren’t just a one-way street. Meta is caught up in U.S. lawsuits accusing it of not shielding minors from harm on its platforms, with a New Mexico trial now exposing the company’s youth-safety policies to public scrutiny, according to Wired. (WIRED)
Tuesday’s open should reveal if traders see the UK proposal as a true stock-specific blow, or simply another layer of chatter for a sector already jittery about AI capex. On slow news days, action in other megacaps can knock Meta around, even if the trigger is offshore.
Investors are eyeing Meta’s upcoming quarterly cash dividend — $0.525 per share, set for payout on March 26. To lock in eligibility, shareholders need to be on record by March 16, which serves as the official cutoff for the dividend. (Atmeta)