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US software stocks rebound, seeking to loosen AI’s grip

By Thomson Reuters May 19, 2026 | 9:59 AM

By Niket Nishant

May 19 (Reuters) – Shares of several U.S. software stocks gained on Tuesday, as the industry attempts a comeback after being battered for much of the year on fears of disruption ​from artificial intelligence.

The beleaguered sector’s rebound coincided with a slide in ‌chipmakers, which began to cool off following a blistering rally that took the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index to a record high earlier this month.

The iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF hit its highest level since January before paring gains, while Workday, ServiceNow and Salesforce ‌rose ​between 1.4% and 2.4%.

Cybersecurity firms CrowdStrike, Okta, SailPoint ⁠and Zscaler gained between 1% ⁠and 2.6%. The Amplify Cybersecurity ETF touched an all-time high and was last up 0.6%.

The gains hint at a possible shift in investor sentiment as markets reassess software stocks following a painful valuation reset.

“We continue ​to see some very attractive investments in software for those investors who can afford to be somewhat patient,” said Gregg Moskowitz, senior enterprise software ⁠analyst at Mizuho.

A sustained rebound would suggest ⁠that markets are becoming more selective, distinguishing between companies genuinely ​at risk of being disrupted by AI and those that could ultimately benefit ​through higher productivity, new products and stronger customer demand.

The divergence ‌was on display on Monday, with analysts at BofA Global Research giving ServiceNow a “buy” rating, while reinstating Salesforce with an “underperform.”

ServiceNow is “difficult to challenge” because it is “too entrenched” in large enterprise workflows, they said. Salesforce, however, faces what the ⁠analysts called “a structural shift that permanently impairs Salesforce’s business model.”

“The market is drawing a clear line between companies that rely heavily on traditional per-seat subscriptions and ⁠those positioned closer to ‌the center of the AI buildout,” said Anthony Saglimbene, ⁠chief market strategist at Ameriprise Financial.

Still, the rally may ​need to ‌extend further to convince skeptics. Investors are likely to ​demand clearer ⁠evidence that software companies can defend their profit margins and business models from the competitive threat posed by AI.

The iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF has lost 12.2% so far this year as of Monday’s close. The S&P 500 software and services index is also down 13.7%.

(Reporting by Niket Nishant in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Tasim Zahid)