ServiceNow (NOW) stock barely moves after ex-Microsoft legal chief Nowbar is named president — here’s what investors watch next

ServiceNow (NOW) stock barely moves after ex-Microsoft legal chief Nowbar is named president — here’s what investors watch next

New York, January 5, 2026, 21:38 EST — Market closed

  • ServiceNow named former Microsoft legal chief Hossein Nowbar as president and chief legal officer, replacing Russ Elmer.
  • NOW shares closed up 0.05% and were little changed in extended trading after the announcement.
  • Analysts at RBC and Piper Sandler cut price targets, keeping bullish ratings ahead of the next earnings report.

ServiceNow on Monday named longtime Microsoft executive Hossein Nowbar as president and chief legal officer, shifting the top legal job as the company leans harder into AI and cybersecurity. Microsoft Vice Chair and President Brad Smith called Nowbar “incredibly fortunate to have him,” in a statement. ServiceNow shares closed up 0.05% at $147.52 and were little changed in extended trading, which is trading outside the 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. regular session. ServiceNow Newsroom

The move lands at a delicate moment for big enterprise software firms, which are balancing customer cost controls with a flood of new rules and scrutiny around data, privacy and AI. For ServiceNow, legal and governance execution has become a market variable, not back-office plumbing.

Investors also start the year focused on guidance tone. Broker notes on Monday showed analysts turning more cautious on valuation and near-term spending, even as they argue the long-term AI opportunity remains intact.

Nowbar will oversee global legal, ethics, governance, compliance and risk functions, among other areas, while outgoing chief legal officer Russ Elmer moves into a special counsel role, the company said. Nowbar spent more than two decades at Microsoft, most recently as chief legal officer and a corporate vice president. Stock Titan

RBC Capital analyst Matthew Hedberg lowered his price target on ServiceNow to $195 from $240, while keeping an “Outperform” rating, a research note showed. Piper Sandler analyst Rob Owens cut his price target to $200 from $230 and maintained an “Overweight” rating; a price target is an analyst’s estimate of where a stock should trade over the next year. TipRanks

Technically, traders will note that the stock swung between $145.79 and $149.81 on Monday and remains well below its 52-week high of $239.62, with the 52-week low at $135.73. At Monday’s close, the shares were about 38% below that high and about 9% above the low. Marketwatch

The legal shake-up also comes as ServiceNow works through a bigger security push that will require regulatory sign-offs and integration planning. In late December, ServiceNow agreed to buy cybersecurity firm Armis for about $7.75 billion in cash, a deal it said it expects to close in the second half of 2026. Business Wire

But staffing changes do not erase the larger debate around software demand in a tighter budget environment. If enterprise spending fails to firm, or if large deals face delays or execution missteps, the stock can stay pinned near its recent lows despite upbeat ratings.

The next hard catalyst is results: Nasdaq and Zacks list ServiceNow’s next earnings report for February 4. Investors will be looking for fresh subscription-growth commentary, margin discipline and any update on the Armis timeline. Nasdaq

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