IBM shares fell more than 25% at the market close on Tuesday after the company said it had misinterpreted the boom in AI spending. On Tuesday, eight days before the company’s scheduled earnings conference call, CEO Arvind Krishna released a letter to shareholders detailing a quarterly “performance shortfall,” including lower-than-expected revenue. “While we anticipated some
IBM shares fell more than 25% at the market close on Tuesday after the company said it had misinterpreted the boom in AI spending.
On Tuesday, eight days before the company’s scheduled earnings conference call, CEO Arvind Krishna released a letter to shareholders detailing a quarterly “performance shortfall,” including lower-than-expected revenue.
“While we anticipated some supply chain-related impact to our expectations, we did not anticipate the magnitude of capital spending reprioritization,” he wrote. “In addition, customers were distracted by rapidly evolving cybersecurity concerns across the industry during the quarter.”
The warning quickly revived rumors of a SaaSpocalypse: fear that AI will erode the value of some traditional software companies. For months, investors have worried that companies will need fewer software subscriptions as AI agents automate and create custom tools.
IBM is not a purely software-as-a-service company, and Krishna did not say that AI had made its products obsolete. Instead, he said clients redirected spending toward increasingly expensive servers, storage and memory, leaving less money available for some of IBM’s software and consulting services.
The deficit continues to strike a chord with industry bigwigs. Companies are pouring money into the infrastructure needed to power AI, while investors increasingly wonder how much of that spending will ultimately go to established software vendors.
Here’s what smart voices in business and technology are saying about the anticipated announcement.
