A bruising week in court has spilled into the markets for Meta Platforms. The company’s shares fell sharply after two adverse rulings in the United States, dragging down the wealth of its co-founder Mark Zuckerberg by nearly $20 billion (Rs. ~1.66 lakh crore).
The fall came quickly. Each verdict triggered fresh selling, as markets reacted not just to the penalties but to what they might signal ahead.
The first case, heard in New Mexico, dealt with child safety. The jury said Meta failed to do enough to protect minors from harmful content and online predators. The ruling included financial penalties, but the sharper impact lies in how responsibility was assigned.
In California, the second verdict went further. The jury pointed to the way the platforms are designed, saying certain features encourage excessive use and can cause harm. The focus, this time, was not just on what appears on the platform, but how it keeps users engaged.
The sell-off reflects a larger worry. These rulings may not remain isolated. The growing sense says that similar cases could follow, particularly those related to mental health and child safety. More cases would mean more costs and more uncertainty.
Investors are looking at whether legal protections that have long been enjoyed by tech companies could weaken under pressure. The shift in mood is evident. What was once thought to be a manageable regulatory issue is now seen as more structural.
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Meta is likely to appeal both decisions. Legal battles of this kind tend to move slowly, offering time but little immediate relief.
The company is already dealing with rising costs and tighter scrutiny across markets. The added legal pressure complicates that picture. For investors, it introduces questions that do not have easy answers.
For Mark Zuckerberg, the sharp drop in wealth mirrors the volatility in the stock. Courtroom developments, once seen as background noise, are now moving to the center of the story for Meta and the wider social media industry.