Key Points
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Over the last several weeks, Meta has been offering top artificial intelligence (AI) researchers lucrative contracts.
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These people are now part of Meta Superintelligence Labs, a division focused on competing directly with OpenAI and others.
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Jensen Huang appears to be supportive of Meta’s hiring strategy, but there’s a catch.
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Every few decades, the technology world is reshaped by a generational visionary who somehow seems to see the future before it actually unfolds. Right now, the most important technologist might just be Jensen Huang, the CEO of Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA).
Huang does not understand artificial intelligence (AI) purely from a technical perspective. The way he speaks about it is more cerebral.
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Beyond Huang, another technological visionary who is worth paying close attention to is Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of Meta Platforms. Over the last several weeks, Meta has reportedly been on an aggressive hiring campaign, poaching top AI researchers from OpenAI, Alphabet, GitHub, and Apple.
Huang recently addressed Meta’s hiring strategy during a discussion at the All-In Summit, hosted by billionaire venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya.
While Huang’s comments about Meta sounded supportive overall, I think there are some key nuances to point out as Zuckerberg seeks to take on competition in the AI realm.
Let’s dig into Huang’s comments and assess what could be in the cards for Meta investors.
What did Huang just say about Meta?
In a video clip shared on social media, Huang shares his thoughts around Meta’s recent hiring spree and the reported hundred-million-dollar signing bonuses.
Huang said that a team of roughly 150 researchers and appropriate funding could potentially go on to build a rival platform to OpenAI’s ChatGPT. To back up his claim, he explained that several existing AI models that compete with ChatGPT were built by a team of similar size to what Zuckerberg is reportedly assembling through the creation of Meta Superintelligence Labs (MSL).
On the surface, this sounds like Meta just earned a vote of confidence from Nvidia, once referred to as the “godfather of AI.” But is that really the case?
I think there might be more than meets the eye to Huang’s comments.
Image source: Getty Images.
What Huang didn’t say
As a private company, OpenAI is not required to publish its financials or operating metrics. However, according to reports from CNBC, OpenAI now has 3 million paying enterprise customers and $10 billion in annual recurring revenue (ARR). To put this into perspective, OpenAI’s ARR was estimated to be around $5.5 billion last year.
Those numbers show the company has nearly doubled its ARR base in less than a year, underscoring OpenAI’s ability to acquire customers and accelerate its growth trends despite intensified competition from other large language models (LLM) from Anthropic, DeepSeek, and Alphabet, for example.
These nuances matter because Meta Superintelligence Labs won’t just need to launch something, it will need to prove that it can weather challenges across product execution, customer acquisition, and competing with incumbents with strong first-mover advantages.
Although Huang appears confident that more companies will introduce products that compete directly with OpenAI, I would say that his comments fall short of an explicit endorsement of Meta, per se. Rather, I think he’s more simply implying that Meta has been investing strategically in its quest to conquer the AI landscape.
Is Meta stock a buy now?
As the chart below illustrates, Meta experienced sizable expansion in its price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) a couple of years ago. During this period, management implemented significant cost reductions, particularly in the metaverse division. It made a strategic decision to reallocate these savings into AI initiatives.
META PE Ratio data by YCharts.
Given the trends above, I’d say that investors welcomed the shift from the metaverse to AI and began pricing in some of the upside. However, over the last 18 months, Meta’s P/E levels have pulled back considerably.
In my eyes, this valuation reset suggests that investors may not fully appreciate the foundation that Zuckerberg and the management team laid a couple of years ago. In other words, the market may have prematurely bought up the stock, only to discount the long-term upside of the AI opportunity now.
With the creation of Meta Superintelligence Labs and a roster of all-star talent ready to build and launch new AI-powered services, Meta could be on the cusp of a massive transformation that remains discounted from a valuation standpoint.
At its current levels, I see Meta stock as a no-brainer buying opportunity at these prices as I think the company’s upside from AI is largely discounted right now.
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Adam Spatacco has positions in Alphabet, Apple, Meta Platforms, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Apple, Meta Platforms, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.