Today: 19 May 2026
ServiceNow (NOW) stock price slides again as ‘software-mageddon’ deepens — what’s next
6 February 2026
2 mins read

ServiceNow (NOW) stock price slides again as ‘software-mageddon’ deepens — what’s next

New York, Feb 5, 2026, 17:46 (EST) — After-hours

  • ServiceNow shares dropped roughly 7.6% Thursday, slipping to $102.63 in after-hours trading.
  • U.S. software stocks dropped for the seventh day running, pressured by worries over AI-driven disruption and a pullback in spending.
  • Traders are focused on the delayed U.S. jobs report set for Feb. 11 and the CPI data due Feb. 13 as the next key risk indicators.

ServiceNow (NOW) shares dropped roughly 7.6% on Thursday, ending the day at $102.63 in after-hours trading. During the session, the stock fluctuated between $112.24 and $100.03.

The selloff extended in U.S. software and data services stocks, with the S&P 500 software and services index tumbling 4.6%. Since Jan. 28, it’s now set to lose around $1 trillion in market value. Dubbed “software-mageddon,” the index has plunged roughly 21% below its 200-day moving average—a key long-term benchmark—as investors wrestle with how rapidly evolving AI might impact subscription software demand. Reuters

Wall Street’s wider mood weighed on sentiment. Alphabet revealed plans for up to $185 billion in capital spending by 2026, sparking investor doubts over whether this AI-focused spending spree will actually boost profits. “We’re seeing this volatility about whether this investment will translate, ultimately, into results,” said Tom Hainlin of U.S. Bank Wealth Management. Melissa Brown at SimCorp was more direct: the AI trade “was the accelerant last year” but “is perhaps the extinguisher this year,” hitting software stocks hard. Reuters

Not everyone is heading for the exits, but buying is cautious. The S&P 500 software and services index dropped 13% in the last week, wiping out over $800 billion in market value. James St. Aubin from Ocean Park Asset Management said the sell-off signals “an awakening to the disruptive power of AI” and stressed that “valuations must account for that.” Jake Seltz at Allspring has been adding to some positions, including ServiceNow, though he’s holding back until clearer signs emerge—like AI-driven product revenue and wider enterprise adoption. Reuters

ServiceNow insists AI is a boost, not a risk. Last week, it forecasted fiscal 2026 subscription revenue between $15.53 billion and $15.57 billion. The board also approved another $5 billion in share buybacks, with a $2 billion accelerated repurchase set to kick off soon.

The company has been linking itself closely with external AI models. ServiceNow and Anthropic announced that Claude is now the default for ServiceNow’s Build Agent, with ServiceNow confirming it has deployed Claude tools internally. CEO Bill McDermott described the tie-up as “turning intelligence into action.” Meanwhile, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei cautioned companies against viewing AI as just a “bolt on.” ServiceNow Newsroom

Macro data added to the risk-off sentiment. U.S. weekly jobless claims climbed to 231,000 for the week ending Jan. 31. At the same time, job openings dropped to 6.542 million in December, marking their lowest point in over five years, largely due to a steep fall in professional and business services.

The next key labor-market report will arrive on Feb. 11 at 8:30 a.m., according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Their schedule confirms the release of the January Employment Situation report on that date.

Inflation data follows soon after. According to the BLS calendar, the January 2026 CPI report will be released Feb. 13 at 8:30 a.m.

This remains a story about confidence as much as data. If investors continue to view new AI tools as direct replacements for parts of the software stack, the sector could face another wave of multiple compression—even if current revenue doesn’t take a steep hit.

ServiceNow now faces a key test: can its software slump hold steady through Friday’s session? The Feb. 11 jobs report will be crucial, either inviting buyers back into high-growth stocks or triggering another pullback.

Stock Market Today

  • Diageo Share Price Slumps 55% Over Five Years Amid Market Challenges
    May 19, 2026, 2:39 PM EDT. Diageo's share price has fallen 55% over five years, with a 28% drop in the past year, pressured by a cost-of-living crisis, US tariffs, and shifting consumer habits among younger generations. After a November 2023 profit warning linked to weaker sales in Latin America and the Caribbean, the FTSE 100 spirits giant has struggled to recover. New CEO Sir Dave Lewis, appointed in January to revive the company, has cut the dividend by half and aims to reduce costs by $625 million over three years. Despite a slight sales uptick in Q3 2024 to $4.5 billion, key markets including North America and China remain weak. Net debt stands at $21.7 billion with a market cap of £32.5 billion, and investors face uncertainty as consumer attitudes and geopolitical tensions weigh on demand.

Latest articles

Marvell Stock Is Jumping Again — The AI Chip Trade Has One Week To Prove It

Marvell Stock Is Jumping Again — The AI Chip Trade Has One Week To Prove It

19 May 2026
Marvell shares climbed 6.6% to $180.04 Tuesday, outperforming a falling Nasdaq as investors positioned ahead of its May 27 earnings call. Trading volume reached 15.3 million shares, with the company’s market value near $155.5 billion. The stock’s rally followed analyst price target hikes and speculation over AI data-center demand. Marvell last reported record annual revenue and forecast further growth led by its data-center business.
Enbridge Stock Hits a 52-Week High Even as Line 5 Fight Throws Up a Fresh Risk

Enbridge Stock Hits a 52-Week High Even as Line 5 Fight Throws Up a Fresh Risk

19 May 2026
Enbridge Inc. shares hit a 52-week high of C$78.25 on Tuesday, rising 2.76% even as the S&P/TSX Composite slipped 0.1% amid inflation concerns. The move came after the company reaffirmed 2026 financial guidance and despite a partial construction pause on its Line 5 project in Wisconsin. Pembina Pipeline shares also rose, though less sharply.
Amazon shares fall as $200 billion AI question lingers

Amazon shares fall as $200 billion AI question lingers

19 May 2026
Amazon shares fell 2.3% to $258.73 Tuesday, underperforming the S&P 500 and Nasdaq as investors trimmed tech holdings ahead of Nvidia’s earnings. AWS revenue jumped 28% to $37.6 billion last quarter, but Amazon’s free cash flow dropped to $1.2 billion over the past year from $25.9 billion, reflecting heavy AI spending.
AppLovin stock price slips after hours as CloudX launch and Wedbush target cut put Feb. 11 earnings in play
Previous Story

AppLovin stock price slips after hours as CloudX launch and Wedbush target cut put Feb. 11 earnings in play

Exxon Mobil stock price slips after oil drops; XOM traders brace for U.S.-Iran talks
Next Story

Exxon Mobil stock price slips after oil drops; XOM traders brace for U.S.-Iran talks

Go toTop