NEW YORK, May 24, 2026, 13:06 (EDT)
UiPath shares go into the holiday-shortened week after a rebound, with earnings in focus. PATH ended Friday at $10.93, a gain of 3.41%, and volume at 39.35 million shares. The stock is up 6.4% from last Friday’s $10.27 close.
Markets are mostly shut early this week. U.S. trading is closed Sunday, plus the NYSE and Nasdaq are off Monday for Memorial Day. That leaves just three sessions—Tuesday through Thursday—for investors to set up ahead of UiPath’s fiscal first-quarter results due after the close on May 28.
The stock is shaping up as a short-week earnings trade. It’s more than a play on a software bounce. Management will hold its call at 5 p.m. EDT Thursday. The focus will be on signs that automation and AI agent demand is translating to higher subscription growth.
UiPath is targeting first-quarter revenue between $395 million and $400 million, with annual recurring revenue projected at $1.894 billion to $1.899 billion for the period ending April 30. Analysts polled by Benzinga expect EPS of 13 cents and quarterly revenue at $397.47 million.
Stocks got a lift from broader market trends. U.S. stocks just finished an eighth winning week in a row on Friday—S&P 500 gained 0.4%, Dow rose 0.6%, Nasdaq was up 0.2%. The Russell 2000 added 2.7% for the week, suggesting investors weren’t only buying into megacap tech.
UiPath needs to prove it can move on its own. In March, the automation software firm posted Q4 revenue at $481 million, a 14% increase. Annual recurring revenue hit $1.853 billion, up 11%. The company finished a $1 billion buyback and approved a new $500 million repurchase plan. CEO Daniel Dines said it was “a strong quarter.” Ashim Gupta, who heads operations and finance, said UiPath was GAAP profitable for the year for the “first time in company history.” UiPath, Inc.
UiPath picked up a boost for bulls last week after the company said May 21 it was named a Leader in Forrester’s Q2 2026 report on document mining and analytics platforms. The software handles data extraction from documents like invoices and contracts. “Documents are the connective tissue of enterprise processes,” said Badri Narayanan, UiPath’s senior vice president for software engineering. UiPath
UiPath leans into broader automation as rivals crowd document-mining, Forrester says. The firm pointed to competition from enterprise content specialists like Iron Mountain and OpenText, and automation vendors such as Automation Anywhere and UiPath itself. UiPath stands out, Forrester wrote, by pushing document processing as part of its agent, orchestration, governance and human review suite.
Revenue, ARR, and fiscal-year guidance are set to drive the story this week. UiPath is guiding for fiscal 2027 revenue between $1.754 billion and $1.759 billion, with ARR in a $2.051 billion to $2.056 billion range. Any swing in those forecasts could be more important than where first-quarter EPS lands.
But the risks go both ways. UiPath’s most recent annual report flagged that weaker demand, cheaper rivals, packaged software from other firms, and quicker AI rollouts by competitors could all pressure demand or prices. Customers could also doubt UiPath’s outlook if they see its tech falling behind as generative and agent AI catch on.
PATH is trading as a rebound story for now, with too many questions still hanging over it. The shares lifted off the May 14 close at $9.67 and the session low at $9.20, but last week’s attempt to break past $11.30 didn’t hold. Investors sold strength ahead of results, showing hesitation.