ServiceNow closed around $89.81 Today, down nearly 8% on the day, as two separate pressures landed on the stock at the same time. The decline added another bruising chapter to what has already been a difficult year for shareholders of the enterprise software company.
The stock has now fallen 38.3% since January 1, and at its current price, it sits more than 56% below its 52-week high of roughly $211, which it reached in mid-2025. A $1,000 investment made five years ago would be worth approximately $858 today. Friday was the 11th session in the past 12 months where shares moved more than 5% in a single day, which puts the drop in context even if it does not make it easier to absorb.
The first blow came from overseas
News broke Friday that a ceasefire agreement in the Middle East had collapsed, sending investors away from higher-risk assets across the broader market. The timing was particularly sharp for ServiceNow shareholders. Just 10 days earlier, the stock had climbed 6.2% after President Trump signaled that diplomatic talks with Iran were progressing. Friday’s session effectively erased most of that recovery in a matter of hours.
Geopolitical instability of this kind tends to push investors toward safety, and technology stocks with elevated valuations are often among the first to sell off when uncertainty spikes. ServiceNow, which had already been under pressure from a broader SaaS sector correction this year, was poorly positioned to absorb that kind of sentiment shift.
Then came the AI threat
The second force was more specific to ServiceNow’s business. Anthropic announced a new product line it is calling Managed Agents, a suite of fully autonomous AI tools designed to handle complex, multi-step workflows from start to finish without human involvement. For investors in companies that sell software to manage those same workflows, the announcement raised immediate questions about how defensible the traditional enterprise software model remains.
ServiceNow’s core product is a cloud platform that large companies use to route, track, and resolve everything from IT tickets to HR requests to security incidents. The concern is straightforward. If autonomous AI systems can handle those workflows directly, the case for paying for a dedicated software layer to manage them becomes harder to make.
Short seller Michael Burry amplified the anxiety briefly when he posted a social media comment suggesting Anthropic was putting pressure on Palantir before deleting it shortly after. The post added no concrete information about ServiceNow, but it contributed to a nervous mood already building through the SaaS sector.
UBS piled on Friday as well, cutting ServiceNow from Buy to Neutral and setting a fresh price target of $100. The stock was already trading below that figure at $88 when the downgrade arrived. The firm noted that enterprise buyers are increasingly evaluating whether purpose-built AI agents can replace traditional workflow platforms, and that the risk-reward balance for NOW shares has shifted.
What the numbers actually say
The market’s reaction sits in stark contrast to ServiceNow’s reported financials. The company posted full-year 2025 revenue of $13.3 billion, up 21% from the prior year. Subscription revenue accounted for $12.9 billion of that figure. Remaining performance obligations, which measure contractually committed future revenue, reached $28.2 billion by year end, a 27% increase.
ServiceNow has also been building its AI capabilities rather than standing still. It holds active partnerships with both Anthropic and OpenAI and completed its acquisition of Moveworks earlier this year. Moveworks provides AI agent technology used by companies including Toyota and Unilever. That technology has been folded into a product called Autonomous Workforce, launched in February, which ServiceNow says resolves 90% of routine IT support requests without any human involvement.
Analyst firm Benchmark, which initiated coverage on April 1 with a Buy rating and a $125 price target, pointed to ServiceNow’s integrated platform of AI, workflow automation, and data analysis as reasons to remain constructive on the stock.
The question investors are sitting with
The tension between ServiceNow’s operational performance and its stock price is the central issue heading into the rest of 2026. The company is not ignoring the AI threat. It is spending to address it directly, building products that incorporate autonomous AI rather than competing against it.
Whether the selloff reflects a rational recalculation of the company’s long-term competitive position or a sector-wide overreaction to a difficult news cycle is a question the market has not finished answering. For long-term investors watching the stock trade more than 56% below its peak, the answer to that question carries real weight.

