New York, June 10, 2026, 09:01 ET
- UiPath’s PATH shares ended the session at $10.75, off 3.76%. Pre-market quotes pegged the stock at $10.59.
- The real issue isn’t a weak quarter, but whether AI automation is making recurring revenue climb quickly enough.
- Investors have their eye on the company’s second-quarter ARR guidance, which is set between $1.929 billion and $1.934 billion.
UiPath shares slid ahead of Wednesday’s session, following up Tuesday’s drop as some investors brushed aside upbeat first-quarter revenue and weighed recurring growth rates. PATH finished Tuesday at $10.75, off 3.76%. The stock was last seen at $10.59 pre-market, off 1.49%, Investing.com data showed. The tech names sold off broadly, with the Nasdaq falling 0.97%.
UiPath’s stock issue isn’t a miss on revenue. Revenue for the fiscal first quarter came in at $418 million, up 17% year over year. Annual recurring revenue hit $1.901 billion, a 12% increase. ARR, a subscription-software metric, represents the annualized value of current recurring contracts, but UiPath says it shouldn’t be read as a future revenue forecast.
The 17% revenue growth versus 12% ARR growth is hanging over PATH shares. The stock is getting tagged as a “show me” name. UiPath is down 14.7% for the week, according to a June 9 Trefis note, which flagged the gap between headline revenue and ARR. Trefis said the selloff shows investors are doubting the strength and staying power of PATH’s growth, not just reacting to a recent earnings figure. Trefis
UiPath bulls got a boost after management said agentic products are shifting from “pilot to production.” CEO Daniel Dines made the comment in the earnings release, talking up software where AI agents, automation bots, and employees work together. COO and CFO Ashim Gupta pointed to “first quarter GAAP profitability for the first time,” referring to results under standard U.S. accounting rules. UiPath, Inc.
UiPath showed better numbers than its share price let on. The company posted $28 million in GAAP operating income, $92 million non-GAAP operating income, and $132 million in operating cash flow for the quarter ended April 30. Non-GAAP results strip out stock-based pay and some other items.
Guidance is the flashpoint now. UiPath put out second-quarter revenue guidance of $395 million to $400 million and sees ARR between $1.929 billion and $1.934 billion. The midpoint of that ARR forecast means about $30.5 million in new ARR from Q1, down from $49 million net new ARR just reported.
That’s what investors care about right now. UiPath wants to shift its story from simple robotic process automation—software bots that do the digital grunt work—to a bigger strategy as an AI orchestration platform. But in this market, it’s acceleration that is getting the bid, not just holding steady. Reuters said Tuesday the S&P 500 technology index fell 1.8%, the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index dropped 1.9%. JonesTrading’s Michael O’Rourke called it a “momentum unwind” during the drop. Reuters
Analysts haven’t rushed to back the stock, but most aren’t turning bearish, either. According to Google Finance, 17 analysts tracking PATH in the last three months give it a Hold consensus: 2 rate it a Buy, 14 are at Hold, and 1 has a Sell. Their average 12-month price target is $13.31—higher than the current price, but not by much, and questions on growth linger.
UiPath reported $1.416 billion in cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities as of April 30, according to its June 4 quarterly filing. Operating cash flow for the quarter came in at $131.9 million. The same filing showed the board greenlit a new $500 million share buyback plan in March.
UiPath’s buyback is underway. The company bought back 20.4 million shares last quarter, paying an average of $11.47, and picked up another 2.4 million shares from May 1 through May 15 at an average $9.63. That can help per-share numbers, but growth investors still want to see better proof of AI-fueled demand and are watching how much cash UiPath is putting into buybacks.
Market worry could be justified if revenue keeps outpacing ARR as renewals, timing, or deal mix skew things, and customers keep holding off on big automation projects with tech spending shaky. UiPath is warning on customer churn, platform adoption, rivals, AI rules, dependence on outside cloud and language model vendors, macro shocks, and share price swings.
PATH needs more than another AI story to move the needle. The key comes down to hitting its Q2 ARR target of $1.929 billion to $1.934 billion and what the July 31 numbers say about enterprise AI automation’s real momentum—whether it’s starting to speed up recurring revenue or just sounds good on paper.