Salesforce (CRM) finished Monday’s trading session up 3.44% at $179.73 as investor attitudes toward AI-related risks in enterprise software began to evolve. The shares have declined 29.1% year-to-date and remain 37.6% below their 52-week peak of $288.06 reached in May 2025.
Salesforce, Inc., CRM
The rally emerged as market participants started reassessing whether AI truly represents the existential threat to established SaaS providers that many had anticipated. This anxiety—sometimes referred to as the “SaaS Rout of 2026″—had pressured the sector significantly in recent months.
The changing sentiment received support from industry peers. Figma delivered 46% revenue expansion with promising early AI monetization metrics. ServiceNow unveiled a multi-year AI collaboration with Experian. Both developments reinforced the narrative that enterprise software firms are successfully integrating AI into their offerings rather than facing displacement.
Salesforce had already received a lift three days prior, advancing 4.2% when the Trump-Xi summit in Beijing improved tech sector sentiment broadly, pushing the S&P 500 briefly above 7,500. While the summit yielded few tangible agreements, it positively influenced trade-related sentiment.
Salesforce is doing more than protecting its traditional CRM operations. With Agentforce, the platform enables clients to create and implement AI agents for functions including customer support, IT operations, and payment processing.
The performance metrics are compelling. Agentforce and Data Cloud collectively achieved $2.9 billion in annual recurring revenue, expanding more than 200% year-over-year. Agentforce individually generated $800 million in ARR, representing 169% growth.
Particularly noteworthy is the source of this expansion. Over 60% of new bookings originated from the existing customer base—demonstrating that Salesforce is successfully cross-selling and upselling within its install base rather than depending solely on new customer acquisition. This pattern suggests genuine product value, not market share erosion.
The Informatica acquisition supports this strategy. It facilitates data organization and quality management, enabling AI agents to function more effectively across customer environments.
Fourth-quarter performance validated this trajectory. Subscription and support revenue—comprising approximately 95% of total revenue—increased 13% year-over-year. Non-GAAP EPS surged 37%. These metrics don’t reflect a company experiencing fundamental disruption.
However, Current Remaining Performance Obligation expanded just 9% on an organic constant-currency basis after adjusting for currency fluctuations and the Informatica contribution. The headline figures somewhat overstate the underlying momentum.
For fiscal 2027, Salesforce projected revenue of $46 billion at the midpoint—representing 11% growth—with non-GAAP EPS of approximately $13.15, translating to roughly 5% expansion. About 3 percentage points of revenue growth derives from the Informatica acquisition.
At approximately 12.7x forward earnings, CRM trades at a 40% discount relative to the software industry average of approximately 25x. The multiple sits more than 60% below Salesforce’s own five-year historical average of roughly 45x.
If earnings growth reaccelerates to around 13% in FY28 and 19% in FY29, the stock would trade at a single-digit earnings multiple on FY29 projections at today’s price—even accounting for a modest valuation expansion.
Wall Street’s consensus rating is Moderate Buy. Among 37 analyst ratings issued in the past three months, 27 recommend Buy, eight suggest Hold, and two advise Sell. The average price target of $260.48 indicates approximately 45% upside potential from present levels.
The post Salesforce (CRM) Stock Climbs 3.4% as Agentforce Momentum Counters AI Disruption Concerns appeared first on Blockonomi.


