IBM's stock plunged nearly 25% to 27% following a shocking earnings warning, erasing about $70 billion in market value and marking one of its worst trading days in decades.
The company's preliminary second-quarter results revealed revenue of approximately $17 billion, falling short of Wall Street's $18 billion expectation, leading to investor panic.
CEO Arvind Krishna acknowledged that IBM "faltered," highlighting a significant shift in customer spending from traditional software to AI infrastructure, disrupting IBM's core business.
The forecast for only a 1% revenue increase underscored the challenges IBM faces in adapting to the rapidly evolving technology landscape dominated by AI investments.
Analysts pointed to IBM's reliance on its mainframe business as a weakness, with the company now pivoting towards software solutions and its high-margin Red Hat offerings to mitigate losses.
Amid IBMs turmoil, U.S. stock indices managed to rise, reflecting a broader market resilience even as concerns mounted about the shifting dynamics in the software sector.
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