Today: 19 June 2026
Atlassian Shares Surge as Investors Shift From AI Software Fears
29 May 2026
2 mins read

Atlassian Shares Surge as Investors Shift From AI Software Fears

New York, May 29, 2026, 15:02 (EDT)

  • Atlassian shares jumped roughly 15.6% Friday afternoon, ahead of gains across the software group.
  • Investors moved back into software stocks after some peers posted strong AI-related results.
  • The stock is still trading with earlier AI disruption fears and restructuring costs in the background.

Atlassian shares surged Friday, following a big rally in software stocks. Investors looked more ready to pick up names once seen as at risk from AI.

The stock jumped 15.6% to $107.85 in afternoon trade. Nearly 9.6 million shares changed hands, about twice the recent average. The iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF climbed 5.6%. Snowflake, Salesforce, and ServiceNow were also higher.

Atlassian is in focus after being swept up in the SaaS debate—SaaS for subscription cloud software. The downside case? If AI agents start handling more tasks themselves, customers don’t need to buy as many workflow or collaboration products.

Software services stocks bounced Friday, but the move felt softer this week. Reuters said Wall Street’s software services index gained 5% that day, wiping out losses from late January when AI worries weighed on the sector. At 11:28 a.m. ET, the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.26% as tech and an AI-fueled earnings rally lifted the index.

Atlassian helped push the sector higher. The company last month reported fiscal third-quarter revenue up 32% to $1.79 billion, with cloud revenue up 29% from a year ago. CEO Mike Cannon-Brookes said customers were making “bigger, longer-term commitments.” CFO James Chuong said there was momentum in “Enterprise, AI, and the System of Work.” Business Wire

Snowflake shares surged almost 37% Thursday after its results and higher full-year sales guidance showed investors that AI demand can help software growth, instead of hurting it. That came as Salesforce dropped the same day on a weak revenue forecast. Axios reported the moves came ahead of Friday’s buying.

Atlassian shares climbed Thursday after Snowflake’s earnings, according to a TradingView/StockStory note. The report suggested demand for enterprise AI may help tools like Jira, Confluence, and Rovo, not replace them. That’s a market view, not guidance from the company.

Atlassian keeps making that case in front of investors. At its May investor forum, the company pointed to enterprise, AI and its “System of Work” as main priorities. That’s the phrase Atlassian uses for linking work, teams and information across Jira, Confluence and other products. Atlassian Investors

Analysts are watching if Atlassian’s work data sets up a new layer for AI agents. Futurum Group’s Mitch Ashley wrote that with Atlassian opening up Teamwork Graph, years of work context could become “a layer any AI agent can call.” Ashley said the real contest will be if Atlassian can shift its big workflow user base into a real developer ecosystem. Futurum

AI hopes were still in play. “We certainly haven’t seen the last of AI optimism,” Melissa Brown, head of investment decision research at SimCorp, told Reuters. She pointed to the strong first-quarter earnings. Reuters

But there’s not much of a safety net under the rally. If AI spending turns to infrastructure names and away from application software, Atlassian is back under valuation pressure. Reuters said in March the company would cut about 10% of staff, or 1,600 jobs, to drive harder into AI and enterprise sales. D.A. Davidson’s Gil Luria said software players might get more efficient as AI takes hold, but that could mean new ways of building and staffing products.

Macro risks are hanging over the market. Stocks pushed higher Friday, but Reuters said inflation moved up at its quickest pace in three years in April. Some Fed officials have started warning that if inflation keeps climbing, they might need to tighten policy. Growth stocks can take a hit from higher rates, since that knocks down the present value of their future profits.

Atlassian is still getting credit from the market for keeping up with AI talk. The bigger question is if Rovo, Jira, and Teamwork Graph can drive real revenue growth when the sector’s relief rally cools off.

Iwona Majkowska is a financial markets journalist at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, artificial intelligence and technology. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics, she previously worked in equity research and financial analysis before focusing on market reporting. Her daily coverage helps investors follow major developments across U.S. and global markets.

Stock Market Today

  • Master Components Limited Approaches Ex-Dividend Date with Low Payout Ratio and Growing Earnings
    June 18, 2026, 10:41 PM EDT. Master Components Limited (NSE:MASTER) will trade ex-dividend in three days, with a dividend of ₹0.75 per share payable on July 29. The stock's trailing yield stands at 0.2% based on the current price of ₹359. The company paid out just 4.0% of its profits last year, indicating conservative dividend coverage. However, its negative free cash flow raises sustainability concerns if this pattern continues. Notably, earnings per share have grown rapidly by 51% annually over the past five years. Investors should weigh the improving earnings and low payout ratio against cash flow risks when considering the dividend.

Latest articles

Kardigan pops in first Nasdaq trading after $400 million IPO

Kardigan pops in first Nasdaq trading after $400 million IPO

19 June 2026
Kardigan surged 37.5% above its $16 IPO price to close at $22 after raising $400 million in an upsized Nasdaq debut, signaling renewed investor appetite for large biotech IPOs as the company advances three late-stage cardiovascular drug candidates.
Adobe Stock Rises Again as Wall Street Revisits AI Trade
Previous Story

Adobe Stock Rises Again as Wall Street Revisits AI Trade

Aurora Shares Rise as Wall Street Looks to Driverless Trucks
Next Story

Aurora Shares Rise as Wall Street Looks to Driverless Trucks

Go toTop