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Workday shares jump as AI demand eases investor concerns

By Thomson Reuters May 22, 2026 | 3:49 AM

May 22 (Reuters) – Workday shares jumped 8.5% on Friday after the enterprise software maker beat first-quarter revenue and profit estimates, easing concerns that AI rivals such as Anthropic could ​rapidly disrupt demand for traditional vendors.

Subscription revenue at the ‌Pleasanton, California-based company jumped 14.3% to $2.35 billion, with net new business driving 40% of that growth, Chief Commercial Officer Rob Enslin said on Thursday.

Workday also reiterated its annual subscription revenue forecast.

At least seven brokerages raised their price targets on ‌Workday ​stock, while two trimmed it after the ⁠results. The company was ⁠set to add more than $2 billion to its market valuation of $30.42 billion if gains hold.

“We are not sure these results will be a thesis changer but provide comforting data points nonetheless,” ​analysts at Barclays said in a note to clients.

The stock has slumped around 43% so far this year, while the S&P ⁠500 software and services index has fallen ⁠about 14% in the same period.

Workday has been ​adding AI features across its platform to remain competitive including the March ​launch of Sana, its conversational AI layer.

The company’s AI-driven ‌tools help organizations automate tasks such as screening job applications, scheduling interviews and streamlining workforce planning.

Revenue for the three months through April 30 came in at $2.54 billion. Analysts on an average expected $2.52 billion, according ⁠to data compiled by LSEG. Adjusted per-share profit of $2.66 was well above an estimated $2.51.

“We believe Workday is relatively insulated from AI disruption due ⁠to its 80 million ‌users, strong retention, and status as a system ⁠of record,” said analysts at Jefferies.

Workday’s 12-month forward ​price-to-earnings ‌multiple is 10.90, compared with peer Salesforce’s 12.80.

“While ​there are ⁠some who believe that AI can disrupt Workday, I see something different — our chance to once again be a disruptor with AI clearly driving that disruption,” CEO Aneel Bhusri said on a post-earnings call.

(Reporting by Kanchana Chakravarty and Jaspreet Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Nivedita Bhattacharjee ​and Joyjeet Das)