
Another notch higher
Raymond James decided Meta deserved a little more runway, lifting its price target to $825 from $800 while sticking with a Strong Buy rating. In analyst-land, that’s basically the equivalent of saying, “Same great movie, just an even better sequel.”
Why investors should care
Meta already trades like a company that knows the market expects a lot. So when a firm moves the target higher, it’s not about a giant plot twist — it’s about confidence that the business can keep delivering enough ad revenue, AI momentum, and cash generation to justify the premium vibe.
The bigger message
This note also adds to the pile of Wall Street enthusiasm around Meta. The stock has been swimming in analyst optimism lately, which can be nice fuel for sentiment — even if the real test is whether Meta keeps turning all that AI spending and product tinkering into actual dollars.
Big picture:
This isn’t the kind of headline that changes Meta’s business overnight, but it does tell you the Street still sees more upside than downside. And when a megacap keeps getting price-target nudges higher, investors tend to pay attention.
