Shares of Atlassian (TEAM) advanced 8.1% on May 15, reaching $86.61, following a diplomatic meeting between Trump and Xi in Beijing that altered the trajectory of US-China trade discussions.
Atlassian Corporation, TEAM
The summit delivered fewer tangible agreements than investors anticipated. However, the overall atmosphere evolved from adversarial to moderately positive — and for an industry as internationally integrated as enterprise software, that shift proved sufficient.
The S&P 500 achieved a milestone, surpassing 7,500 during the same trading session. Technology stocks experienced broad-based buying interest.
This upward movement wasn’t isolated. Two distinct developments from the broader enterprise software landscape reinforced the positive sentiment.
Figma disclosed 46% revenue expansion, demonstrating genuine progress in early AI monetisation efforts. ServiceNow unveiled a multiyear artificial intelligence collaboration with Experian. Both announcements conveyed a consistent message: enterprise software providers are successfully integrating AI capabilities into their offerings and generating revenue from these features.
This storyline holds significance for Atlassian. Earlier this year, apprehension that artificial intelligence would destabilize rather than strengthen enterprise software platforms had pressured the sector. These recent developments helped diminish those worries.
Truist Securities maintained its Buy stance and $100 price objective on TEAM, referencing the company’s artificial intelligence roadmap unveiled at its Team 26 conference.
The firm emphasized how Atlassian intends to generate revenue from AI through its Rovo credit framework, which encompasses both internal platform usage and external consumption. Truist views Atlassian as strategically positioned to function as a supplier of enterprise context for AI implementations.
Company leadership has highlighted adoption of the Teamwork Collection as proof that interest in its AI offerings is expanding. Truist anticipates the extended strategy involves adding proprietary context over tokens through a usage-based pricing structure.
Other Wall Street firms have shown less unanimous optimism but remain generally positive. Bernstein SocGen Group maintains a $295 price objective. Cantor Fitzgerald projects $107. BofA forecasts $100. Piper Sandler carries an Overweight designation with a $175 target. Macquarie holds a $130 estimate with an Outperform classification.
These projections reveal their own narrative — substantial divergence exists, with minimal consensus among the figures.
Atlassian’s third-quarter fiscal 2026 performance demonstrated strength. Cloud revenue exceeded analyst projections by 4.5% and expanded 29% year-over-year, accelerating from 26% in the previous quarter. Data center transitions and the DX acquisition fueled that expansion.
Free cash flow fell short of expectations due to severance costs, though cloud revenue and non-GAAP operating income surpassed analyst estimates.
The equity remains depressed by 44% year-to-date. It trades 60.8% under its 52-week maximum of $220.89, achieved in July 2025.
For perspective: a $1,000 position in Atlassian from five years ago currently holds a value of $407.94.
TEAM has experienced 33 movements exceeding 5% during the past year. Thursday’s 8.1% advance aligns with this volatility pattern — notable, yet not the type of movement that fundamentally alters the investment thesis independently.
The stock’s prior significant fluctuation was a 3.8% decline two trading days earlier, triggered by the April PPI data driving Treasury yields to 10-month peaks.
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