NEW YORK, Jan 4, 2026, 10:37 ET — Market closed
- Salesforce shares closed at $253.62 on Friday, down 4.26%, before a small after-hours bounce. 1
- The drop tracked weakness across enterprise software names as investors favored value over growth on the first session of 2026. 2
- Next up: the U.S. December jobs report due Jan. 9 and the still-unconfirmed date for Salesforce’s next earnings. 3
Salesforce Inc shares ended the first trading day of 2026 down 4.26%, closing at $253.62 on Friday, a sharp pullback in a Dow component that investors often treat as a read on corporate software spending. 1
The move matters now because high-multiple software stocks tend to react quickly when interest-rate expectations change. Higher bond yields can pressure valuations by lifting the discount rate investors apply to future earnings. 2
A packed week of U.S. data after a disrupted release calendar is also back in focus. The Labor Department’s Employment Situation report for December 2025 is scheduled for Friday, Jan. 9 at 8:30 a.m. ET, a release that can reset rate bets in one print. 3
On Friday, Salesforce opened at $265.00, hit a high of $265.38 and slid to as low as $252.48 before the close, with volume around 9.68 million shares, market data showed. 4
After the bell, the stock edged up about 0.24% to $254.24, according to Yahoo Finance data. 5
Other enterprise software names moved in the same direction. ServiceNow fell 3.75% on Friday while Oracle rose 0.41%, MarketWatch data showed. 6
The broader tape was choppy. The S&P 500 and Dow finished higher while the Nasdaq ended slightly lower, and “value is outperforming growth,” said Jed Ellerbroek, a portfolio manager at Argent Capital, in comments to Reuters. 2
For Salesforce, the next earnings report is the key company catalyst. Third-party calendars disagree on the date: Nasdaq and Yahoo list Feb. 25 as an estimate, while MarketWatch and other calendars show March 4. The company has not posted a fresh scheduling release in recent days. 7
The earnings bar is set by Salesforce’s prior outlook. In early December, the company raised its fiscal 2026 revenue and adjusted profit forecasts and pointed to accelerating adoption of its AI offerings, including Agentforce and Data 360, which it said together were generating nearly $1.4 billion in annual recurring revenue — a subscription run-rate metric. 8
Investors going into the next report are likely to focus on whether that AI momentum shows up in bookings and revenue, and whether Salesforce can sustain the margin discipline that has supported the stock through a volatile year for large-cap software. 8
But the downside scenario is straightforward: a hotter jobs print or other data that pushes yields higher can hit software valuations broadly, while any sign that customers are delaying AI-related upgrades would raise doubts about when new products translate into paid subscriptions. 2
Technically, Salesforce heads into Monday’s reopening near the bottom of Friday’s $252.48–$265.38 range and about 31% below its 52-week high of $367.09, market data showed — leaving traders watching whether the stock holds Friday’s low when liquidity returns. 9
The next catalysts are Monday’s Jan. 5 U.S. reopening, Friday’s Jan. 9 jobs report at 8:30 a.m. ET, and confirmation of Salesforce’s earnings date, with traders scanning for any update to the company’s schedule and for broader moves in Treasury yields. 3