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Meta Auditor EY Raised Red Flag on Data-Center Accounting

Sebastian Hills
3 Min Read
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Meta Platforms is facing fresh scrutiny over its financial maneuvers, as its auditor Ernst & Young flagged the accounting treatment of a $27 billion data-center project as a โ€œcritical audit matterโ€ in the companyโ€™s latest annual report, highlighting the challenges in determining control over the off-balance-sheet joint venture.

While EY ultimately approved Metaโ€™s decision to keep the Hyperion data-center project off its books, the firm noted in the report that auditing this assertion โ€œwas especially challenging due to the significant judgment required in determining the activities that most significantly affect the VIEโ€™s economic performance.โ€ Such designations for specific, high-profile transactions are rare at major audit clients, underscoring the complexity and risk involved.

Meta transferred the Hyperion project off its balance sheet in October 2025 into a new joint venture with Blue Owl Capital, where Meta holds a 20% stake and Blue Owl-managed funds own the remaining 80%. The venture, classified as a variable interest entity (VIE), issued a record $27.3 billion in bonds through a holding company called Beignet Investor, which owns Blue Owlโ€™s portion. Meta determined it is not the โ€œprimary beneficiaryโ€ of the VIE, allowing it to exclude the ventureโ€™s assets and liabilities from its balance sheet.

The move has drawn criticism from investors and lawmakers, who argue that Metaโ€™s expertise in AI data centers gives it de facto control despite the structure, potentially obscuring the companyโ€™s true financial picture. Four Democratic senators, including Elizabeth Warren, sent a letter on January 22, 2026, to the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC), led by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, urging an investigation into the risks posed by AI-related debt. The lawmakers described such financing arrangements as โ€œconvoluted and opaque,โ€ making it easier to hide balance-sheet realities, and cited Metaโ€™s joint venture as a prime example.

This isnโ€™t Metaโ€™s first brush with accounting questions; the companyโ€™s aggressive infrastructure spending on AI has ballooned, with capital expenditures reaching $40 billion in 2025 alone, fueling concerns over sustainability and transparency.

As Big Techโ€™s AI arms race intensifies, Metaโ€™s off-balance-sheet tactics could invite further regulatory probes, especially amid broader debates on how companies account for massive data-center investments in an era of escalating energy and financial demands.

News Source

wsj.com

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