Wall Street Is Optimistic That Worst of Software Wipeout Is Over

After months of heavy selling on fears of artificial-intelligence disruption, software stocks appear to have found a bottom — at least for now.

The S&P 500 software index is coming off its best week since May. The widely followed iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF, ticker IGV, just posted its strongest week in 11 months and is up 14% since Feb. 23, when Citrini Research rattled the market with its dystopian vision of an AI future.

Even with those gains, which have been tempered by a dip this week, the stocks still look cheap as a result of the selloff that began in the second half of last year. A Goldman Sachs software basket is trading for 22 times forward earnings, compared with 21 for the S&P 500 Index. Over the past decade, the basket has traded at an average multiple of 52, while the S&P 500’s average is 19.

Shares of cloud-based software provider Salesforce Inc. are priced at less than 15 times earnings compared with their 10-year average of 46. And Microsoft Corp. is trading for 22 times earnings, down from its 10-year average of 27.

“We see a big disconnect between valuations and high-quality fundamentals, where the risks seem exaggerated,” said Hua Cheng, a portfolio manager at Mirova, which has $39 billion in assets.

software multiples

Risk has been the watchword around software makers for a while, as investors fret about the impact of AI on those businesses. The logic is that if AI agents can code, companies can just build their own software suites and cut out the firms they once bought them from.