BullVox / Blog / Meta Stock Forecast: 11 of 15 Finance YouTubers Say Buy

Meta Stock Forecast: 11 of 15 Finance YouTubers Say Buy

We analyzed the transcripts of 36 finance YouTube channels we track daily. Of the 15 that have published a qualified call on Meta, 11 rate it a buy, 2 say sell, and 2 are watching — a consensus score of 86 out of 100, the single highest in our entire dataset. That makes Meta the #1-ranked stock of 564 on our Terminal right now. Here is exactly who says what, why the bulls keep coming back to one number, and the case the two dissenters are making against the crowd.

TL;DR

  • 15 channels cover Meta: 11 buy, 2 sell, 2 watch — consensus score 86/100 (Strong Buy), ranked #1 of 564.
  • The bull case is almost entirely valuation: a forward P/E near 16–18x for a business still growing revenue ~33% year over year.
  • The bear case is narrower: Joseph Carlson warns equity dilution is costlier for Meta at a low multiple; another channel doubts who wins the AI race.
  • Stock is around $593 against creator price targets ranging from $732 to $1,000+.
  • Live consensus, updated twice a day: Meta on BullVox.

What the data says

Meta is not a contested name in our data the way Oracle is. It is the closest thing we have to a clear consensus. Of the 15 channels that have published a qualified Meta call, 11 land on buy, only 2 on sell, and 2 are watching — and the composite score of 86/100 is the highest of any stock we track.

The interesting part is not that creators like Meta. It is why. Almost every bull citation rests on the same observation: the stock trades at a forward earnings multiple in the mid-to-high teens while revenue is still compounding north of 30% a year. In a market where the other megacaps carry far richer multiples, several creators frame Meta as the cheapest large-cap AI exposure available. The disagreement, where it exists, is not about whether the business is strong — both dissenters concede that — but about capital allocation and competitive risk.

Is Meta stock a buy? What the bulls argue

The buy side is unusually consistent. The recurring theme is “great business, undemanding price.”

  • Couch Investor (Jun 15, buy, conviction 4/5) calls Meta “an obvious buy despite current negative headlines,” pointing to strong revenue and EPS growth, rising average revenue per user, and a valuation of roughly 20.6x trailing and 16.4x forward earnings — below its own five-year median. Meta is his single most-covered stock, with 10 tracked calls. Video: The Most Obvious Buys in This Market Right Now
  • Daniel Pronk (Jun 9, buy) is blunter, calling the stock “ridiculously cheap” at about 18.8x forward earnings. His DCF points to a roughly $732 fair value with an assumed ~18.6% growth rate.
  • Invest with Henry (Jun 3, buy) frames Meta as “evolving into an AI advertising powerhouse,” citing 33% year-over-year revenue growth and expanding margins, with a $1,000 target.
  • BWB - Business With Brian (May 19, buy) made the contrarian-timing case: the stock was down 23% from its highs while the business was strengthening — 33% revenue growth and roughly 800 basis points of margin expansion.
  • Stealth Wealth Investing (Jun 14, buy) describes a cash-generating business positioned as an AI winner with untapped monetization levers across its apps.

The price targets among the bulls range from about $732 to over $1,000, against a recent price near $593 — so the buy case is explicitly built on a gap between price and the creators’ own fair-value math, not on momentum.

The dissenting view: the cost of dilution

The most credible bear case comes from one of the more accurate channels we track. Joseph Carlson (Jun 8, sell, conviction 3/5) — whose calls score 61% accuracy with a tracked portfolio up +40.4% versus the S&P 500’s +26.4% — does not argue that Meta is a bad business. His objection is structural: he advises against Meta using equity to fund its ambitions, noting that dilution is “significantly more costly” at Meta’s ~19x forward P/E than it would be for a company like Google trading near 30x. In his framing, the same low valuation the bulls celebrate becomes a reason to be cautious if management leans on its shares to pay for the AI buildout. Video: These Stocks Are Going Down

The second dissenter, Arte de invertir (Mar 1, sell), takes a different angle: the difficulty of predicting which models and platforms ultimately win the AI race, referencing the broader shift from software to AI-infrastructure plays. It is a “winner uncertainty” argument rather than a balance-sheet one.

Two more channels sit deliberately on the fence. Financial Education (Jun 15, hold) likes Meta as a 10-year opportunity but cautions on the near term, arguing that heavy infrastructure spending suppresses short-term earnings per share. Asymmetric Investing (Apr 27, watch) is monitoring engagement trends, the monetization roadmap, and how AI spending lands in earnings before committing.

What is the Meta stock forecast among these creators?

Taken together, the picture is a strong-but-not-unanimous buy. The bulls’ fair-value estimates cluster in the $732 to $1,000-plus range and rest on the same two-part claim: revenue still growing around 33% a year, paired with a forward multiple in the high teens. The bears do not dispute the growth; they question capital allocation and long-run AI positioning. That is a healthier consensus than a stock everyone loves for the same reason, because the disagreement is specific and falsifiable rather than vague.

What it is not is a recommendation. A score of 86 reflects what 15 creators have said on camera, weighted by recency and conviction. You can watch it move on the Meta page, where each new call is added within hours of the video going live, and compare it against the rest of the field on the Terminal.

FAQ

Do finance YouTubers think Meta stock is a buy? Mostly yes. Of the 15 channels we track covering Meta, 11 rate it buy, 2 sell, and 2 are watching — a consensus score of 86/100, our highest, which we classify as a Strong Buy. The most recent calls (Couch Investor and Stealth Wealth Investing, both June 2026) are buys.

What is the price target for Meta stock? Among the creators who set one, targets range from about $732 (Daniel Pronk’s DCF) to $1,000 or more (Invest with Henry), against a recent price near $593. Those figures come from the creators’ own valuation models on our Meta page and are not a recommendation.

Why do some YouTubers say sell Meta? The two sell calls are not about the business being weak. Joseph Carlson warns that funding the AI buildout with equity is costly at Meta’s relatively low valuation, and Arte de invertir cites the difficulty of predicting which AI platforms ultimately win.


Methodology: we transcribe every new video from 36 tracked finance channels and use AI to extract only qualified calls — a named stock, a clear stance, and real reasoning. Passing mentions and hype clips are filtered out. See how it works.

Not financial advice. This article aggregates third-party opinions for informational purposes.

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Why you can trust the ranking

No hype, no cherry-picking — just qualified calls, weighed evenly across every creator we track.
1

Only qualified calls

A named stock, a clear buy or sell stance, and real reasoning. Passing mentions and hype are filtered out.

2

One vote per creator

Each channel counts once per stock, so a single loud voice can't skew the ranking.

3

Weighted consensus

We weigh how many creators agree, how convinced they are, and how recent each call is.