NEW YORK, July 17, 2026, 09:06 EDT (pre-market)
- UiPath was set at $11.76, a decrease of 2.2% ahead of Friday’s NYSE opening.
- Tetragon Financial Group LON:TFG reported holding a 6.8% passive stake.
- The guidance midpoints indicate that $129 million in ARR growth will be required during fiscal H2.
UiPath Inc. NYSE:PATH must meet a $129 million annualized renewal run-rate challenge for the second half. Shares were set at $11.76, down 2.2%, ahead of Friday’s opening. Greater passive ownership and a retail AI partnership helped stabilize sentiment.
Based on guidance midpoints, fiscal second-quarter ARR is expected to grow by just $30.3 million from April. UiPath will then require $64.5 million per quarter for the rest of the year.
The rate is 2.1 times the implied growth for the second quarter, and 32% higher than the net new ARR of $49 million in Q1. The figures are preliminary calculations by reporters, not official company guidance.
Tetragon Financial Group LON:TFG held a beneficial ownership of 30.95 million Class A shares as of June 30, according to an SEC filing dated July 15. This accounted for 6.8% of the class.
The stake rose by 5.45 million shares from Tetragon’s March filing, marking a 21% uptick. Tetragon stated the shareholding was not intended to influence UiPath’s control.
UiPath purchased shares at prices close to current levels. In Q1, it bought back 20.4 million shares at an average price of $11.47 each. By May 15, it had repurchased an additional 2.4 million shares at $9.63 apiece.
Shares closed Thursday at $12.03. In premarket trade, the stock was indicated at $11.76, close to the first-quarter buyback level. The repurchases back up the valuation argument, but they do not confirm accelerated ARR growth.
UiPath said earlier this week it has signed a three-year deal with private retailer The Very Group. The company did not reveal the contract’s value.
The system is set to enable pricing for a catalogue exceeding 200,000 products. Very reports it has 4.2 million customers and annual revenues topping £2 billion.
Sam Wright, Very’s chief customer and commercial officer, described pricing as “one of the most powerful levers in retail.” The economics are still not disclosed. UiPath
ARR does not represent revenue. UiPath calculates ARR based on annualized invoiced subscription and support figures, not including professional services. The midpoint highlights the acceleration needed.
| ARR checkpoint | ARR level | Relevant ARR addition |
|---|---|---|
| April 30 actual | $1.9012 billion | $49.0 million net increase in Q1 |
| July 31 guidance midpoint | $1.9315 billion | $30.3 million added since April |
| January 31 guidance midpoint | $2.0605 billion | $129.0 million expected in fiscal H2 |
| Implied fiscal H2 average | — | $64.5 million each quarter |
Initial estimates use midpoints of UiPath’s guidance. These are not official quarterly forecasts from the company.
UiPath, Inc. reported a 17% rise in Q1 revenue to $418 million, outpacing a 12% increase in ARR. Dollar-based net retention stood at 109%. Adjusted free cash flow totaled $130 million.
Chief Executive Daniel Dines stated that agentic products are progressing “from pilot to production.” The Very contract serves as an example, though no annual recurring revenue contribution was disclosed. UiPath, Inc.
UiPath ended Thursday nearly 39% under its 52-week peak. Out of 15 analysts followed by Google Finance, 12 assigned a Hold rating, with an average price target of $13.27.
In the coming week, investors are set to monitor updates on contract economics and potential new customer acquisitions. The following ARR measurement is scheduled for July 31.
Risks are evident. The rollout of Very might advance at a slower pace than anticipated. Softer renewals or reduced customer expansion could increase the ARR shortfall in the second half.