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Salesforce stock price steadies at $191 after AI-driven software selloff — what to watch next
8 February 2026
2 mins read

Salesforce stock price steadies at $191 after AI-driven software selloff — what to watch next

New York, Feb 7, 2026, 18:33 EST — Market’s done for the day.

  • CRM finished Friday up, bouncing back after a tough AI-driven selloff hit software and data stocks.
  • Investors are weighing if the momentum in AI is moving away from applications and toward the “picks-and-shovels” names tied to hardware.
  • Salesforce’s next big mover: results and a conference call set for Feb. 25.

Salesforce (NYSE:CRM) bounced 0.7% higher to finish at $191.35 on Friday, recovering from a tumble to $187.12—its lowest point in a year—before rallying into the close. Earlier in the session, the stock had reached $194.60.

The rebound in the final stretch wasn’t enough to make up for the week’s losses. Salesforce is down roughly 9% for the week—caught up in the growing divide within the AI trade, where hardware and infrastructure names are attracting capital, while software stocks seen as exposed to AI risk are taking the hit. “This divergence is not a vote against AI,” Saxo’s Charu Chanana said. Reuters

Markets remain unsettled. That $600 billion AI investment spree from big tech this year has rekindled worries over how—if at all—companies will turn spending into profits, and investors are still wary of shelling out for expansion. “It got too pricey,” said Andrew Wells, chief investment officer at SanJac Alpha. Reuters

This week’s jolt came straight out of the AI sector. Anthropic rolled out its upgraded Claude Opus 4.6 model Thursday, and pointed to progress on much bigger “token” caps — tokens being the basic text units these systems analyze. The developments fueled bets that emerging AI could eat into business long held by traditional software. “We are excited to partner and actually lower the floor to get more value out of those tools,” Anthropic’s head of product for enterprise Scott White said. Reuters

Salesforce finds itself right at the heart of this debate. The company relies on subscription-based CRM software, usually charging per user seat. That model leaves it vulnerable if clients freeze hiring, trim license counts, or push for more productivity with fewer seats.

Salesforce has its next major update coming Feb. 25, with fourth-quarter and full-year fiscal 2026 results set to drop after the bell. The conference call starts at 5 p.m. ET, according to the company.

Macro could put yet another twist in play first. The U.S. jobs numbers are now set for Feb. 11, with the consumer price index following on Feb. 13, both pushed back after the federal shutdown, S&P Global Market Intelligence says. These are the kind of data points that can shift rate bets and, in turn, move tech valuations.

The challenge for Salesforce stretches beyond the upcoming data release. A picture-perfect quarter might still leave investors uneasy, wrestling with how AI could play out—will it drive up software demand, flatten it into a commodity, or simply redirect spending elsewhere in the tech stack?

Other names in the group have taken a hit too, highlighting a sector-wide pullback rather than just one company’s problem. Still, certain AI-related hardware stocks are proving more resilient—a clear sign that “tech” isn’t moving in lockstep anymore.

Monday, the focus shifts to whether buyers step back into struggling software names and if bonds hold steady before the delayed U.S. numbers land. Next up for Salesforce: its Feb. 25 earnings and call, the clear milestone for CRM stock.

Stock Market Today

  • SpaceX's $1.77 Trillion IPO Sparks Wall Street Debate Over Valuation and Musk's Ambitions
    June 11, 2026, 9:36 AM EDT. SpaceX is set to launch its record $1.77 trillion initial public offering (IPO) on June 12, aiming to raise $75 billion by selling shares at $135 each under the ticker SPCX. The offering reflects robust investor interest in AI and high-growth tech firms but faces scrutiny over its lofty valuation, trading at about 94 times trailing sales despite a $4.94 billion loss on $18.67 billion revenue in 2025. Analysts remain divided: some view it as a speculative leap, while others see potential for a Musk-led conglomerate merger with Tesla, leveraging SpaceX's AI computing infrastructure and its $920 million monthly Google deal. The IPO is reportedly oversubscribed, signaling possible volatile trading on debut.

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