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19 November 2025
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Accenture Stock Today (ACN): Price Action, Fresh Headlines and AI Outlook on November 19, 2025

Accenture plc (NYSE: ACN) is back in the spotlight today, with the stock edging higher even as investors digest a year of underperformance, shifting analyst views and a steady drumbeat of AI‑driven news.

Below is a full rundown of what’s happening with Accenture stock today, November 19, 2025, including all notable news items dated today and how they fit into the bigger picture.


Accenture stock price today: modest bounce after a tough year

As of late-morning U.S. trading on November 19, 2025, Accenture shares are trading around $243 per share, up roughly 1.3–1.4% on the day. MarketWatch shows ACN at about $243.3, up $3+ on the session, putting it in the green even as investors remain cautious. 

Key snapshot:

  • Price: ≈ $243
  • Day move: about +1.3–1.4%
  • 52‑week range: roughly $229.40 – $398.35 
  • 1‑year performance: down about 32% over the past 12 months 
  • Valuation: price/earnings (P/E) around 19.8x, P/E/G about 2.2, beta ~1.28 
  • Dividend yield: ~2.7%, based on a quarterly dividend of $1.63 per share (annualized $6.52), recently raised from $1.48 

So, despite today’s bounce, ACN is still trading much closer to its 52‑week low than its high and remains in “rebound candidate” territory.


Today’s key Accenture stock headlines (November 19, 2025)

Several fresh articles and filings dated November 19, 2025 are shaping the narrative around ACN:

  1. Zacks: “Investors Heavily Search Accenture PLC (ACN): Here is What You Need to Know”
    Zacks notes a surge in search interest for Accenture and assigns the stock a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold), implying expectations for performance roughly in line with the market in the near term. Yahoo Finance
  2. Simply Wall St / Yahoo Finance: “Accenture (NYSE: ACN) investors are sitting on a loss of 31%”
    A piece republished this morning highlights that shareholders who bought a year ago are sitting on a loss of around 31%, even though earnings per share rose and revenue grew by about 7% over the same period, underscoring a disconnect between fundamentals and share price. Futu News+1
  3. MarketBeat: Vanguard Group increases its stake in Accenture
    A new filing shows Vanguard Group raised its Q2 position in Accenture by 2.1% to more than 65.1 million shares, giving it about 10.4% ownership of the company. 
  4. MarketBeat: Empowered Funds and Portside Wealth Group add to ACN
    • Empowered Funds LLC boosted its holdings by 37.9%, acquiring 17,970 additional shares to reach 65,399 shares. 
    • Portside Wealth Group LLC increased its stake by 13.2% to 17,375 shares, making ACN its 26th‑largest position. 
    Across these filings, MarketBeat notes that around 75% of Accenture’s shares are held by institutional investors and hedge funds
  5. Finviz / Schaeffer’s: “Want to Lower Your Tax Bill? Don’t Ditch Underperformers”
    This research piece, published today, explicitly tags ACN as one of the “beaten‑down” stocks down at least 15% year‑to‑date and near two‑year lows. But historical back‑tests show that such laggards have, on average, outperformed from mid‑November into year‑end in the past two years, contradicting the usual tax‑loss‑selling fears. Finviz
  6. Times of India: “Investors dump stocks of IT companies slow in AI race”
    Although focused on Indian IT, this piece singles out Accenture as a global benchmark, pointing out that the company’s early decision in FY23 to commit $3 billion to generative AI is “paying off.” The article cites Accenture’s disclosure that revenue from generative and agentic AI tripled in FY25 vs FY24 to about $2.7 billionThe Times of India+1
  7. Zacks (via Finviz): “IBM Expands AI Consulting Capabilities: Will it Drive Growth?”
    This IBM‑focused article lists Accenture as a key competitor in AI consulting, noting that Accenture recently formed a strategic collaboration with Microsoft to build a Copilot business transformation practice, capturing growing demand for AI‑driven application modernization and cloud projects.

Earnings backdrop: solid numbers, “mixed” guidance

Accenture’s current valuation and sentiment can’t be understood without its latest results and outlook:

  • In Q4 fiscal 2025, Accenture reported:
    • Revenue of $17.6 billion, up about 7% in U.S. dollars and at the top end of its guidance. 
    • EPS of $3.03, beating consensus expectations (~$2.98). 
    • New bookings of $21.3 billion for the quarter and $80.6 billion for the full year. 
  • For fiscal 2025 as a whole, Accenture generated about $69.7 billion in revenue, growing 7% in local currency, and highlighted strong demand in cloud, data and AI services. 
  • Management issued fiscal 2026 guidance that implies mid‑single‑digit to high‑single‑digit revenue growth, but incorporates 100–150 basis points of headwinds from its U.S. federal business. 

A detailed note from RBC Capital after these results is one reason for today’s continued debate around ACN. RBC:

  • Cut its price target from $372 to $285 while keeping an “Outperform” rating, citing “mixed” FY26 guidance versus prior expectations.
  • Flagged that the stock was trading near a 52‑week low (~$237) and down roughly 33% year‑to‑date at the time of the note. 
  • Still highlighted strong generative AI bookings, which exceeded $1.8 billion and were up about 80% year‑over‑year, as well as bookings returning to growth. 

In other words: the fundamentals look healthy, but investors are trying to price in slower pockets of demand and higher capex, especially around U.S. federal work and real‑estate investments going into FY26. 


Institutional money steps in while insiders trim

Today’s MarketBeat filings give a clearer picture of who is buying and selling Accenture stock: 

  • Vanguard Group Inc.
    • Increased its stake by 2.1% in Q2, now holding about 65.1 million shares.
    • That’s roughly 10.4% ownership, worth about $19.5 billion based on Q2 prices.
  • Empowered Funds LLC
    • Raised its position by 37.9%, adding 17,970 shares to reach 65,399 shares (~$19.6 million).
  • Portside Wealth Group LLC
    • Lifted its holdings by 13.2%, buying 2,032 shares to end the quarter with 17,375 shares (~$5.2 million).

Overall, about 75% of Accenture’s float is held by institutions, suggesting large professional investors still see the stock as a core long‑term holding. 

By contrast, insider activity has recently tilted bearish:

  • CEO Julie Sweet and other insiders have sold roughly 33,000 shares over the past 90 days, worth a bit over $8.3 million, leaving insiders with only about 0.02% of shares outstanding. 

Institutional buying plus insider selling is a nuanced signal: big funds may be averaging into weakness, while executives are diversifying after strong compensation years.


Valuation check: beaten‑down, but not “deep value”

Despite a one‑third drop in the stock, Accenture isn’t priced like a distressed asset:

  • P/E ~19.8x and P/E/G ~2.16 are below recent peaks, but not bargain‑basement for a large‑cap IT services leader. 
  • Zacks also gives Accenture a Value Style Score of “D” and reiterates a Rank #3 (Hold), framing it as a quality business trading at a premium to peers rather than a classic value playYahoo Finance+1

The Simply Wall St analysis republished today underscores the disconnect: the stock is down ~31% over the last year, even though EPS grew and revenue increased by about 7.4%, suggesting sentiment and multiple compression—rather than collapsing fundamentals—have driven most of the damage. 

For income‑oriented investors, the dividend story is quietly improving: the quarterly payout was lifted to $1.63 (about 2.7% yield), and the payout ratio is around 54%, leaving room for reinvestment in AI and cloud. 


AI and cloud: Accenture’s growth engine, front and center in today’s coverage

A recurring theme across today’s articles is that AI, cloud and data modernization are increasingly central to the Accenture thesis:

  • The Times of India piece contrasts struggling Indian IT majors with Accenture’s aggressive AI pivot:
    • Accenture committed $3 billion over multiple years to generative AI starting in FY23.
    • By FY25revenue from generative and agentic AI tripled year‑over‑year to roughly $2.7 billion, according to Accenture figures cited in the article. 
  • Accenture’s own FY25 earnings materials and CEO commentary highlight:
    • Broad‑based revenue growth across all regions and industries, with strong contributions from technology, data and AI services
    • Increasing demand for data modernization and AI‑powered transformation projects, where Accenture is positioning itself as a “reinvention” partner for large enterprises. CIO Dive+1
  • Recent AI‑centric deals and partnerships add more color:
    • Essity, a global hygiene and health company, has tapped Accenture and Microsoft to roll out AI agents to boost productivity and growth. 
    • Air France‑KLM is working with Accenture and Google Cloud on a company‑wide Generative AI Factory, underscoring Accenture’s role in applying AI at scale in complex, regulated industries. 
    • A joint study from the Future Investment Initiative Institute and Accenture suggests the next wave of AI investment will tilt toward the Global South, with 9 in 10 investors planning AI deployments in markets like India, Southeast Asia and the Middle East—regions where Accenture is active. 
  • Today’s Zacks IBM article reinforces that Accenture remains a top competitor in AI consulting, noting its new Copilot business transformation practice with Microsoft and healthy Q4 demand in financial services and communications. 

For long‑term holders, this is the crux: AI‑driven work is growing quickly, but the market is still deciding how much of that future growth to pay for today, especially in the face of cyclical slowdowns in other parts of the business.


What Wall Street is saying: “Moderate Buy” with upside from here

The latest round of analyst updates, summarized in today’s MarketBeat pieces, paints a nuanced picture:

  • Across major brokers, Accenture currently carries an average rating of “Moderate Buy”:
    • 1 analyst rates it Strong Buy
    • 15 give it a Buy
    • 11 rate it Hold
    • 1 calls it a Sell 
  • The average 12‑month price target is about $294.25, roughly 20–21% above today’s ~$243 share price
  • But there’s meaningful dispersion:
    • BNP Paribas Exane lowered its target to $255 and set a “neutral” rating. MarketBeat
    • RBC Capital cut from $372 to $285 but stayed Outperform after the “mixed” guidance. Investing.com+1
    • Mizuho trimmed from $348 to $309 while remaining Outperform
    • Wolfe Research actually raised its target from $285 to $300 and reiterated an Outperform view. 

Put simply, analysts largely agree that Accenture is fundamentally strong, but differ on how quickly growth re‑accelerates and what multiple the stock deserves after its AI‑driven reinvention.


How today’s news fits together for Accenture shareholders

Bringing all of this into one picture:

  • Price action: ACN is up modestly today, but still down ~32% over the past year and trading near the low end of its 52‑week range. 
  • Sentiment:
    • Search interest and media coverage are spiking, as highlighted by Zacks and multiple news feeds. 
    • A widely shared Simply Wall St piece reminds investors how painful the last 12 months have been, despite solid earnings growth. 
    • Schaeffer’s/Finviz research suggests beaten‑down names like ACN have historically done better than feared after mid‑November, even with tax‑loss selling. 
  • Fundamentals:
    • Q4 and FY25 results were better than expectations, bookings are growing again, and AI bookings are accelerating
    • Guidance for FY26 is solid but not spectacular, weighed down by U.S. federal headwinds and higher capex. 
  • Ownership dynamics:
    • Big institutional investors are adding, while insiders are trimming—a classic sign of a mature, widely held blue chip going through a sentiment reset rather than an existential crisis. 
  • Strategic story:
    • Accenture is leaning hard into generative and agentic AI, cloud and data, with billions committed and billions already coming in as revenue. 

Bottom line (and a quick disclaimer)

For today, November 19, 2025, the story around Accenture stock looks like this:

  • Short term: a heavily searched, beaten‑down large‑cap with a modest intraday bounce, caught between cautious guidance and strong AI momentum.
  • Medium term: analysts see double‑digit upside from current levels on average, but recommend anything from Hold to Strong Buy, reflecting uncertainty around macro, public‑sector spending and how quickly AI revenue can offset weaker legacy work. 
  • Long term: Accenture remains one of the global bellwethers for enterprise AI and digital transformation, with substantial institutional backing and a growing AI revenue base.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. If you’re considering buying, holding or selling ACN, it’s important to review your own objectives, risk tolerance and time horizon, and, if needed, consult a qualified financial adviser before making any decision.

Stock Market Today

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