Salesforce Stock's Sell-Off Keeps Getting Worse. Is It Finally Time to Buy the Stock?

Source Motley_fool

Key Points

  • Salesforce's AI annual recurring revenue more than tripled from a year earlier.

  • The stock recently hit a fresh 52-week low and is down about 40% in 2026.

  • Even after the decline, the business continues to grow and generate substantial free cash flow.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Salesforce ›

Few of the market's large-cap software names have fallen as hard this year as Salesforce (NYSE: CRM). The stock recently set a fresh 52-week low and is down about 40% year to date, leaving it among the worst performers in enterprise software. What makes the slide unusual is that the underlying business keeps setting records.

The company reported results for its fiscal first quarter of 2027 (the period ended April 30, 2026) in late May, and the numbers were strong. So why does the stock keep falling?

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now, when you join Stock Advisor. See the stocks »

The answer has little to do with the latest quarter and almost everything to do with a single fear: that artificial intelligence (AI) agents will erode the per-seat subscriptions that software companies like Salesforce have long sold. If a handful of agents can do the work of many employees, the worry goes, customers will eventually need fewer paid seats. In addition, there's an overarching fear that AI will increasingly handle what software companies do today.

A chart showing a stock price falling.

Image source: Getty Images.

What the latest quarter actually showed

The fiscal first-quarter results suggest that fear may be overblown, at least for now. Salesforce's revenue rose 13% year over year to $11.1 billion, though about 4.4 percentage points of that growth came from its recent Informatica acquisition. Stripping that out, organic growth was closer to the high-single-digit pace the company has run at for a while.

More telling, however, was what happened beneath the top line. Salesforce's AI and data products generated $3.4 billion in annual recurring revenue (ARR), up about 200% from a year earlier, and its Agentforce agentic AI offering alone crossed $1 billion in ARR after more than tripling. And rather than shrinking, the seat count in the company's largest products grew.

"Our largest applications, sales and service, saw year-over-year seat growth with humans and agents both expanding on the platform," said Salesforce chief operating and finance officer Robin Washington in the company's fiscal first-quarter earnings call.

That dynamic, with customers paying for more seats rather than fewer even as they adopt automation, sits at the center of the bull case. Salesforce is also leaning hard into new ways to charge for AI, including usage-based pricing and a recent $3.6 billion deal to acquire Fin, an AI customer service platform.

The profit picture looks healthy, too. Salesforce's non-GAAP (adjusted) operating margin reached a record 34.8%, and the company generated $6.6 billion in free cash flow during the quarter. Salesforce also returned $27.5 billion to shareholders, the bulk of it through a $25 billion accelerated share repurchase that was the largest in its history. That buyback shrank the share count by about 10% from a year earlier.

Is the sell-off a buying opportunity?

Not everything in the quarter, however, was reassuring. Management pointed to ongoing weakness in the company's commerce and Tableau businesses. Salesforce has also cut staff repeatedly over the past year as it reorganizes around AI. Of course, this can be viewed as both a negative and a positive.

Additionally, investors will need patience. Management is guiding for organic revenue growth to reaccelerate in the back half of the fiscal year -- a recovery investors will have to wait to see.

The real problem for the stock recently may have been valuation. Only now is the stock starting to look reasonably priced in light of the risks of technological change that software companies face. After the sell-off, Salesforce trades at a forward price-to-earnings ratio of about 12, using the midpoint of management's full-year adjusted earnings outlook. For a profitable business still growing revenue at a double-digit rate and expanding its margins while buying back stock aggressively, that is a fairly attractive multiple.

So, is it finally time to buy? I'm staying cautious. The numbers increasingly suggest AI is acting as a catalyst for Salesforce rather than a threat. But the broader uncertainty over how AI will reshape software isn't going away soon, and that overhang could keep a lid on the valuation premium investors are willing to pay for software stocks for years, even ones executing as well as this one.

Overall, buying a small, undersized position here could make sense for investors comfortable with the AI disruption overhang that could plague the stock for years. From there, I'd only build the position into a meaningful stake if the stock falls significantly further. Approaching the stock this way gives investors the flexibility to profit if things go well, and to potentially keep buying a good business at an even better price.

Should you buy stock in Salesforce right now?

Before you buy stock in Salesforce, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Salesforce wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $424,531!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $1,273,016!*

Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 940% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 209% for the S&P 500. Don't miss the latest top 10 list, available with Stock Advisor, and join an investing community built by individual investors for individual investors.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of June 17, 2026.

Daniel Sparks and his clients have no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Salesforce. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
OpenAI courts investors with a $39 billion loss and a $34 billion spending tabOpenAI is asking investors to look past a brutal cost base as it prepares for a stock market debut. The ChatGPT owner spent $34 billion in 2025, brought in about $13 billion, and ended the year with a reported $39 billion loss. Its bills came from developing new systems, buying computing power, running data centers,...
Author  Cryptopolitan
16 hours ago
OpenAI is asking investors to look past a brutal cost base as it prepares for a stock market debut. The ChatGPT owner spent $34 billion in 2025, brought in about $13 billion, and ended the year with a reported $39 billion loss. Its bills came from developing new systems, buying computing power, running data centers,...
placeholder
SpaceX leads the FAB10 into record territoryA new group of tech companies is challenging Wall Street’s traditional favorites. This shift is happening at a time when the tech world has seen a huge IPO, a $60 billion buyout, and a government order that shut off access to one of America’s most powerful AI systems.  Investors have long rallied around the Magnificent...
Author  Cryptopolitan
16 hours ago
A new group of tech companies is challenging Wall Street’s traditional favorites. This shift is happening at a time when the tech world has seen a huge IPO, a $60 billion buyout, and a government order that shut off access to one of America’s most powerful AI systems.  Investors have long rallied around the Magnificent...
placeholder
Stock surge from SpaceX $60B deal for Cursor maker challenges Amazon,, Microsoft valuationSpaceX (NASDAQ: SPCX) briefly shook up the rankings among the highest valued US firms today after it confirmed that it will buy Anysphere, the company behind AI code editor Cursor, for $60 billion in stock.  The stock surge that the rocket maker enjoyed shot its valuation into a new stratosphere as it closed a deal...
Author  Cryptopolitan
16 hours ago
SpaceX (NASDAQ: SPCX) briefly shook up the rankings among the highest valued US firms today after it confirmed that it will buy Anysphere, the company behind AI code editor Cursor, for $60 billion in stock.  The stock surge that the rocket maker enjoyed shot its valuation into a new stratosphere as it closed a deal...
placeholder
SpaceX Hits $2.8 Trillion and Sixth Place, but the Chart Flashes Its First WarningSpaceX (SPCX) climbed into the world’s most valuable companies this week, then stalled. The SpaceX stock spiked near $212 on Tuesday before sliding back toward $202, leaving its first clear sign of fa
Author  Beincrypto
16 hours ago
SpaceX (SPCX) climbed into the world’s most valuable companies this week, then stalled. The SpaceX stock spiked near $212 on Tuesday before sliding back toward $202, leaving its first clear sign of fa
placeholder
How Would a Hormuz Toll Affect Oil Prices?Oil prices tumbled to two-month lows after the US and Iran reached a peace deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Yet beneath the relief, traders are quietly positioning for a rebound.The reason is a ca
Author  Beincrypto
16 hours ago
Oil prices tumbled to two-month lows after the US and Iran reached a peace deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Yet beneath the relief, traders are quietly positioning for a rebound.The reason is a ca
goTop
quote