Analysts rework Meta stock price targets going into 2025

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So how are those New Year's resolutions working out for you?

The year is not a week old, but we thought we'd check in to see about your plans to lose weight, spend time more with your family, quit smoking, learn to play trombone and take up skydiving.

Related: Meta's new vision might transform AI and social media

Roughly 88% of people who set resolutions fail before the end of January, according to a study by the Baylor College of Medicine, and the second Friday of the month has been dubbed “Quitter's Day."

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Changing careers is one of the more popular New Year's resolutions and one of the toughest to keep, but Nick Clegg, Meta Platforms’  (META)  president of global affairs, seems to have nailed that one.

"As a new year begins, I have come to the view that this is the right time for me to move on from my role as President, Global Affairs at Meta," Clegg said in a Jan. 2 post on X. "It truly has been an adventure of a lifetime!"

He will be succeeded by Joel Kaplan, the company’s current vice president of global public policy, who joined Facebook in 2011.

Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg tries on the company's Orion augmented reality glasses.David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg tries on the company's Orion augmented reality glasses.David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Meta kicks in for Trump's inauguration

Kaplan served eight years in the administration of Republican President George W. Bush, worked as a lobbyist, and is reportedly known for handling the company's relations with Republicans.

Clegg, who had worked for the Facebook parent for nearly seven years, said he was "simply thrilled" that Kaplan was taking over the global affairs position, adding that "he is quite clearly the right person for the right job at the right time!"

Related: Analysts reboot Meta stock price targets for 2025

The move comes just ahead of President-elect Donald Trump's return to the White House.

Trump, who has called Facebook "the enemy of the people," wrote in his book “Save America” that Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg plotted against him during the 2020 election. Trump said the Facebook founder would “spend the rest of his life in prison” if he did it again.

Facebook and Meta's Instagram suspended the former president's accounts for two years in 2021 following the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol.

Last month, Meta said it would be donating $1 million to Trump's inauguration, joining OpenAI, Amazon  (AMZN)  and Apple  (AAPL)  CEO Tim Cook, who is personally writing a $1 million check for the event.

And, of course, Tesla  (TSLA)  CEO Elon Musk was a megadonor to Trump's presidential bid.