Today: 25 June 2026
ServiceNow Stock Gets an AI Boost From Experian Deal—but Wall Street Will Want Proof
15 May 2026
2 mins read

ServiceNow Stock Gets an AI Boost From Experian Deal—but Wall Street Will Want Proof

Santa Clara, May 15, 2026, 06:06 PDT

  • ServiceNow and Experian have struck a global, multi-year deal that will plug Experian’s Ascend data and decisioning tools straight into ServiceNow workflows.
  • The companies didn’t reveal financial details. Early applications target areas like employee onboarding, third-party risk management, and model life-cycle governance.
  • Coming after ServiceNow’s $4 billion bond sale, the deal lands during a turbulent period for NOW shares.

ServiceNow and Experian unveiled a global, multi-year deal on Friday, tying Experian’s Ascend data and decisioning platform directly into ServiceNow’s workflow products. The move nudges ServiceNow further into the agentic AI field, where software automates decisions and actions within workflows, requiring only light human input.

Timing is key here: the market isn’t handing out gains to software names just for AI talk anymore. ServiceNow picked up 3.96% to close at $90.50 on Thursday, snapping a two-day drop, but the share price still sits well off its 52-week high. Investors are weighing whether AI agents can really boost revenue, or simply undercut legacy software pricing.

The two companies outlined initial applications like employee onboarding, third-party risk management, and model life-cycle governance. Think of it as Experian bringing its data to handle things like fraud checks and identity verification, while ServiceNow’s platform manages the processes—routing tasks, sign-offs, and records.

MT Newswires said financial details weren’t released. So, for now, this stays a strategic move rather than a financial one, but it does hand ServiceNow a new data-focused ally as it tries to position its platform at the center of AI workflows.

Keith Little, who leads Experian Software Solutions, described agentic AI as a “fundamental change” for intelligent services. ServiceNow’s EMEA president, Cathy Mauzaize, said companies now want to “move beyond experimentation”—bringing ServiceNow’s platform together with Experian’s analytics and decisioning capabilities. Stock Titan

Competition is intense. Salesforce, SAP, and Workday each want their core apps to be the central hub for AI agents tapping company data and handling tasks. This month, PYMNTS reported that ServiceNow, SAP, and Workday are setting stricter rules on customer data access as the rise of AI agents challenges the per-seat software approach.

Just days before the Experian announcement, ServiceNow tapped the debt markets with a $4 billion, five-part senior unsecured note sale. The deal includes 4.250% notes maturing in 2028 and 6.300% notes set for 2056, the company said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Moody’s assigned an expected A2 rating, and S&P Global Ratings put it at A.

ServiceNow’s bond offering attracted upwards of $38 billion in orders—almost 10 times the size of the deal—according to Bloomberg, which cited sources familiar with the matter. That level of demand points to continued appetite from credit investors, even as those in equities have shown more hesitation toward software firms at risk from AI shakeups.

Growth’s not letting up for ServiceNow. First-quarter subscription revenue hit $3.671 billion, a 22% jump from the prior year. The company also bumped its 2026 full-year subscription revenue forecast to a range of $15.735 billion to $15.775 billion. Meanwhile, current remaining performance obligations—forward-looking contracted revenue for the next 12 months—stood at $12.64 billion.

Still, the hazards are clear enough. ServiceNow flagged that turmoil in the Middle East pushed back multiple sizable government contracts, shaving 75 basis points off first-quarter subscription revenue growth. J.P. Morgan analysts, cited by Reuters, noted the stock is showing up more on hedge funds’ short lists as AI-related anxieties batter software names.

Rates complicate things further. On Polymarket, odds hit 67% for no Fed rate cuts in 2026, while a single 25-basis-point trim was priced at just 16%. That backdrop keeps the squeeze on high-growth software firms—they need to deliver real cash returns, not just fresh AI angles.

Now the question is if the Experian partnership actually drives consumption on ServiceNow’s platform. Sure, the announcement hands NOW a new AI headline. Still, investors aren’t likely to look past bookings, usage, and margins—they’ll want to see those numbers move before this is considered anything more than another partner arrangement.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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