
Meta is providing stock options to important executives in a bid to maintain skilled workers as the pressure mounts on the firm to enhance its standing in artificial intelligence.
The leaders included in this incentive initiative are CFO Susan Li, Chief Technology Officer Andrew Bosworth, Chief Product Officer Christopher Cox, and operating chief Javier Olivan, as per SEC documents released on Tuesday night. CEO Mark Zuckerberg, whose net worth surpasses $200 billion, is excluded from the initiative.
A high exercise price and the relatively brief timeline for meeting the objectives indicate Meta’s pressing need to demonstrate advancement in the swiftly growing AI sector. While OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google have launched sought-after AI models and functionalities, Meta has faced challenges in developing a consistent approach, even as it plans to invest up to $135 billion this year in capital expenditures.
“This represents a significant risk,” a Meta spokesperson stated in a report. “These compensation packages will only come to fruition if Meta achieves substantial success in the future, which will benefit all our shareholders. Similar to all stock options, there is only worth if the share price substantially exceeds the exercise price, and in this scenario, the timeline is extremely ambitious at 5 years.”
Meta’s stock has decreased roughly 4% over the past year, trailing most of its large-cap technology counterparts apart from Microsoft, which has seen a 5% decline. In contrast, Alphabet has surged by 73%, propelled by the achievements of its Gemini AI suite.
For the initial phase of options to be allocated, Meta’s stock must reach $1,116.08, indicating an 88% rise from Tuesday’s closing figure and corresponding to a market valuation of around $2.82 trillion, based on the current number of shares.
The following phase necessitates a stock price of $1,393.87. The price escalates considerably for each additional phase, culminating at $3,727.12, which would elevate the company’s valuation beyond $9 trillion. Currently, the world’s most valuable company is Nvidia at about $4.3 trillion.
Meta dedicated 2025 to revamping its AI division after its Llama 4 series of AI models failed to engage third-party developers. As part of its AI transformation, Meta allocated $14.3 billion in June to Scale AI and appointed the startup’s CEO, Alexandr Wang, as its chief AI officer to direct its AI division, now named Meta Superintelligence Labs.
CNBC reported in December that Meta is working on a new successor to Llama and an advanced AI model, codenamed Avocado.
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