Newsfilter article unlocker

Enter Newsfilter article ID in the field below.
Example: https://newsfilter.io/articles/39be1bef03e66cdc886c08a2a6319c47

Retrieved article

U.S. software stocks fell in premarket trading on Thursday, following quarterly results from IBM and ServiceNow that reignited fears about AI-driven disruption across ​the sector.

International Business Machines (IBM.N) said its revenue growth slowed in the ‌first quarter, pressured by weakness in its software business, anchored by its Red Hat cloud unit. Growth in the segment slowed to 11.3%, sending the Big Blue's shares 7.4% ​lower.

ServiceNow (NOW.N) also flagged a hit to its first-quarter subscription revenue service, citing ​delays in Middle East deals due to the ongoing Iran conflict.

Although ⁠both companies reported first-quarter revenue and profit above analysts' expectations, the results ​failed to allay investor fears about the sector.

"The challenge is shifting from simply ​having an AI story to proving that it can support products, workflows, and returns," said analysts at UBS Global Wealth Management.

"Widespread disruption in software is more likely a long-tail ​scenario than an immediate one, especially for enterprise-facing and mission-critical providers with ​sticky customer relationships."

Investor concerns around AI disruption have been building since Anthropic launched new tools in ‌February ⁠that automated tasks across domains, including marketing and data analytics, raising questions about the pressure such products could put on traditional software businesses.

Microsoft (MSFT.O) lost 1.8% in premarket trading. Adobe (ADBE.O) fell 2%, CrowdStrike (CRWD.O) was off 2.2%, Intuit (INTU.O) was ​down 3.2% and Datadog (DDOG.O) ​shed 2.4% before ⁠the bell.

Meanwhile, analog chipmaker Texas Instruments (TXN.O) surged 11.7% after it forecast second-quarter revenue and profit above estimates.

Other analog chip suppliers, ​including ON Semiconductor (ON.O), Microchip Technology (MCHP.O), NXP Semiconductors (NXPI.O) and Analog ​Devices (ADI.O), also ⁠climbed, between 3.7% and 4.7%.

The AI boom has brought opposing fortunes for chip stocks and software, with the S&P 500 software and services index (.SPLRCIS) down over ⁠13% ​so far this year, while the Philadelphia SE ​Semiconductor index (.SOX) has jumped almost 40%.

The benchmark S&P 500 (.SPX) has gained about 4% in the same ​period.


...