Enterprise software stocks have lost more than half their value from peak levels while the S&P 500 hits new highs, as investors price in an AI-driven disruption that company products have yet to offset.
Enterprise software stocks have lost more than half their value from peak levels while the S&P 500 hits new highs, as investors price in an AI-driven disruption that company products have yet to offset.

Enterprise software stocks have lost more than half their value from peak levels while the S&P 500 hits new highs, as investors price in an AI-driven disruption that company products have yet to offset.
The gap between AI winners and software laggards has widened to levels not seen since the dot-com era, with the iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF falling 27% from its record even as the S&P 500 gained 7% in 2026. The divergence has pushed forward valuations on some of the best-known names in enterprise software into single digits.
"The market is drawing a sharp line between companies that enable AI and those whose products AI could replace," said Alex Nguyen, enterprise technology analyst at Edgen. "Software vendors have launched AI assistants, but revenue acceleration hasn't followed."
Intuit has slumped 67% from its July 2025 peak, Trade Desk has fallen 87% from its all-time high, and Adobe has dropped 70% from its record. Salesforce is down 57%. The declines have pushed forward price-to-earnings multiples into single digits — Adobe trades at 8 times forward earnings, Workday at 10 times, and Trade Desk at 9 times. The valuation reset mirrors the private market, where Thoma Bravo's $6.4 billion Medallia acquisition saw its equity wiped out and Vista Equity Partners took a $3 billion write-down on Pluralsight.
The so-called SaaSPocalypse thesis holds that AI agents from companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Harvey can automate tasks that software subscriptions currently cover, threatening the recurring revenue models that once commanded premium multiples. With OpenAI and Anthropic both planning public listings this year, the competitive pressure is about to intensify.
AI Features Haven't Moved the Revenue Needle
Salesforce launched Agentforce, an autonomous AI agent platform for sales and customer service. Intuit introduced Intuit Assist for automated accounting and tax preparation. Workday released Illuminate for HR and finance workflows. Yet analyst estimates show Adobe's revenue growing 11% this year and 8% next year, while Workday's growth is projected at 11.6% and then 10% — well below the 20%-plus rates that once defined enterprise SaaS.
The divergence is stark in IBD's industry group rankings. Computer hardware and peripheral stocks have surged 251.6% year to date. Semiconductor equipment makers have gained 96.1%. Meanwhile, enterprise software groups occupy the bottom of the rankings: financial software down 50.3%, tech services down 27.8%, and enterprise software down 26.4%.
Valuation Reset or Structural Shift?
The forward multiples suggest the market is pricing in permanent margin compression. At 8 times earnings, Adobe's valuation implies expectations of declining profitability, not just slower growth. The S&P 500 Momentum Index sits at the 99th percentile of its 40-year history on a three-year basis, a level matched only during the dot-com peak in March 2000, according to Carson Investment Research.
But the comparison to 2000 cuts both ways. Unlike the dot-com era, today's AI winners — Nvidia, Broadcom, Micron — are generating real earnings growth. The S&P 500's 101% total return since the end of 2022 has been driven 66 percentage points by profit growth and only 26 points by multiple expansion, per Carson's analysis. The question for software stocks is whether their current discounts reflect a genuine structural threat or a sentiment overshoot that will reverse as AI adoption creates new demand for data and workflow tools.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.