Salesforce trails its tech large-cap peers and is the second-worst performer in the Dow this year, ahead of only UnitedHealth. The company's growth rate has been below 10% since mid-2024, and analysts don't expect revenue growth to reach double digits for the latest quarter.
Salesforce (NYSE: CRM) is set to announce its earnings on Wednesday, September 3, 2025. Historical data indicates that the stock has a modestly greater likelihood of experiencing a negative one-day return following its earnings report.
If you're heavily invested in the Magnificent Seven stocks (if you own S&P 500 or Nasdaq 100 ETFs, you've already got this base covered), you're probably delighted with the returns you've gotten over the past couple of years.
It may be a short holiday week but there's plenty of key tech companies reporting earnings. Jenny Horne takes investors through headlines to note in Broadcom (AVGO), Salesforce (CRM) and ZScaler (ZS).
A weak jobs report on Friday could all but make a Fed rate cut official. And earnings season comes to a close with reports also coming from American Eagle, C3.ai, Macy's, and more.
Zacks.com users have recently been watching Salesforce.com (CRM) quite a bit. Thus, it is worth knowing the facts that could determine the stock's prospects.
Salesforce's stock has underperformed the S&P 500, but I remain optimistic about its long-term recovery and GARP appeal. Strong fundamentals - expanding EBIT margins, robust free cash flow, and double-digit cRPO growth - justify Salesforce's premium valuation, which is still not there yet. AI-driven platforms like Agentforce and Data Cloud are gaining momentum, creating promising new revenue streams and supporting future profitability.
The latest trading day saw Salesforce.com (CRM) settling at $248.29, representing a +1% change from its previous close.
Shares of Salesforce Inc. NYSE: CRM closed just above $245 on Wednesday, as they continued to rebound off the support line around the $230 mark. This was the level where the bears ran out of steam both back in April and again earlier this month, and it'll be a reassuring signal for the bulls who might otherwise have been getting seriously worried.
Investors often turn to recommendations made by Wall Street analysts before making a Buy, Sell, or Hold decision about a stock. While media reports about rating changes by these brokerage-firm employed (or sell-side) analysts often affect a stock's price, do they really matter?
Don't let your own disappointing experiences with artificial intelligence (AI) applications fool you into thinking this rapidly growing industry can't produce real earnings. This year alone, the big four tech firms Amazon, Meta, Alphabet, and Microsoft told investors they'd spend a cumulative $364 billion in 2025 on AI-related infrastructure.
Salesforce is undervalued after a 30% drop, now offering its highest free cash flow and earnings yield since 2020, making it a buy. Q1 2026 results beat expectations with 8% revenue growth, expanding margins, and strong free cash flow, highlighting operational improvements. AI initiatives like Agentforce and Data Cloud are driving new revenue streams and productivity gains, positioning Salesforce for future growth.