Accenture (ACN) opened Friday at $186.04 after dropping 4%. The stock has now hit a fresh 52-week low, with its 12-month range running from $182.38 to $325.71. The drop reflects investor concern following a guidance update that came in below what Wall Street was expecting.
Accenture plc, ACN
Management guided FY2026 revenue of $71.8 billion to $73.2 billion. Analysts had been looking for closer to $73.9 billion. That gap was enough to push the stock to its lowest level in a year, even as the underlying quarterly numbers looked solid.
Accenture’s most recently reported quarter showed EPS of $2.93, beating the consensus of $2.84 by $0.09. Revenue came in at $18.04 billion, up 7.8% from the same period last year, and above the $17.80 billion estimate. Return on equity was 26.33%.
The company also announced a quarterly dividend of $1.63 per share, payable May 15 to holders of record as of April 9. That works out to a 3.5% annualized yield on current prices.
UBS analyst Kevin McVeigh published a research note flagging what he sees as a market mispricing. His focus was Accenture’s latest acquisition, Spain-based Keepler Data Tech, which adds roughly 240 specialists in data science, machine learning, and cloud architecture.
McVeigh’s broader argument is that Accenture’s AI strategy is more coordinated and faster-growing than the market is currently pricing in. Since launching generative AI initiatives in fiscal 2023, Accenture has grown AI-related revenue to about $2.7 billion by fiscal 2025 — a compound annual growth rate of roughly 200%. That outpaces even its early cloud business, which grew at around 132% in its first years.
Accenture raised its fiscal 2026 acquisition target from $3 billion to $5 billion. The company has already deployed about $1.6 billion across deals including NeuraFlash, Halfspace, and Decho. McVeigh views this as a shift toward higher-margin, technology-driven business rather than traditional labor-intensive consulting.
The company now has more than 85,000 AI professionals on staff. Bookings tied to AI and data partnerships are expected to more than double in fiscal 2026.
Institutional investors continued to move around positions in ACN during recent quarters. Capital International Investors grew its stake by 41.1% in Q3, bringing its total to over 17 million shares valued at roughly $4.2 billion. Massachusetts Financial Services added 12.8% to its position, now holding about 10.1 million shares.
DDD Partners LLC opened a new position in Q4, acquiring 9,090 shares valued at approximately $2.44 million.
Institutional and hedge fund ownership currently stands at 75.14% of total shares.
Analyst consensus remains cautious but generally positive. Eighteen analysts have a Buy rating on the stock. Ten have a Hold. The average price target is $274.88, well above where the stock is trading today.
The stock’s 50-day moving average stands at $210.98 and its 200-day average at $241.88. At Friday’s open, ACN was trading below both.
The post Accenture (ACN) Stock Falls 4% — But UBS Says the Market Is Missing the Bigger Picture appeared first on CoinCentral.


