Thread regarding IBM layoffs

IBM Loses $69 Billion of Market Value in One Day in Latest AI-Fueled Selloff

Front page of the online version of the WSJ at time of article publication and still there as this is being posted -- 06:01 UTC, Wed., 15 July 2026.
There is no way in he|| that AK can remain as CEO after presiding over this absolutely catastrophic devastation. No CEO can (or should) survive presiding over losing 25% of the company's value in one day.
Perhaps this will spur another company to finally make and offer to buy it.

https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/ibm-stock-profit-warning-earnings-software-8652c06e

Shares of the corporate stalwart plunged 25% as AI purchases crowd out traditional tech spending in many companies’ budgets

By: Robbie Whelan and Heather Gillers |
July 14, 2026 5:18 pm ET

The SaaS-pocalypse has come for IBM [IBM -25.21%]. Shares fell more than 25% Tuesday, the largest one-day drop on record after the company issued a rare profit warning, citing a shift in customer spending from software to artificial-intelligence hardware and memory chips. IBM is scheduled to release its official second-quarter figures next week and could offer a preview of the toll corporate America’s AI bills might take on software spending.

The selloff in software stocks like Adobe and Salesforce earlier this year was triggered by fears that AI companies like Anthropic would enable people to easily make cheaper copies of the software-as-a-service products sold by traditional firms. However, the selloff in IBM’s shares, which wiped out $69 billion in market capitalization, is being driven by a different phenomenon: worries that new AI purchases will crowd out more traditional tech spending in company budgets.

The rapid rise of AI has made chips more expensive, which in turn has driven up prices for everything from laptops and gaming consoles to AI data-center servers. That run-up in costs has squeezed tech budgets at big institutions including banks—a core customer base for IBM—that buy an enormous amount of computing power from cloud companies to run in-house AI tools.

IBM Chief Executive Arvind Krishna said that in June, clients shifted their quarterly capital expenditures toward servers, storage and memory to secure supply-constrained infrastructure ahead of anticipated price increases.

“These conditions require our teams to execute perfectly, and this quarter we faltered,” Krishna said. “While we anticipated some supply chain-related impact in our expectations, we did not anticipate the magnitude of the capex reprioritization.”

Firms like OpenAI and Anthropic are projecting massive upticks in revenues as more companies test cutting-edge tools for a range of tasks like coding, marketing and data analysis. To pay growing computing bills to those and other AI giants, companies are likely to shave down non-AI software and hardware spending sold by traditional firms, said Gil Luria, head of technology research at D.A. Davidson.

“This earnings season is going to be strewn with companies that fall in that category,” Luria said. “They are hearing from their customers, ‘We need to make room in our budget for AI.’ ”

IBM’s challenges aren’t limited to software. Sales of the z17, the company’s flagship enterprise mainframe designed for the AI age, fell short of its expectations. IBM said it expects infrastructure revenue to fall 7%, after previously anticipating a low-single-digit decline.

Unlike other major AI infrastructure providers and large cloud companies like Nvidia, Google and Oracle, which sell chips and networking hardware and rent computing capacity from their own data centers, IBM focuses on selling hardware and software systems that corporate customers install at their own sites. The company’s customer base is heavily concentrated in financial-services firms.

IBM’s mainframe computing and consulting businesses compete directly with AI models like Claude Code, and its infrastructure business faces threats from the rising deployment of massive AI data-center clusters, which offer enterprise clients access to the computing resources they need, often at more competitive prices.

In late May, IBM announced a $5 billion cybersecurity effort with subsidiary software firm Red Hat, known as Project Lightwell, under which the two companies will deploy tens of thousands of engineers and sophisticated AI tools to help secure software supply chains for enterprise customers including Bank of America, Citi, Goldman Sachs, Visa and Morgan Stanley.

Chris Versace, chief investment officer at Tematica Research, said that IBM’s comments, paired with recent statements made by some of its major customers, including J.P. Morgan and Goldman Sachs, represented “confirmation that AI adoption and usage are rising and companies are prioritizing it to drive efficiencies and productivity.”

IBM has also invested heavily in infrastructure for quantum computing, widely regarded as the next phase of advanced processing. In June, the company announced it was launching a unit called Anderon, seeded by $1 billion from the Trump administration, which will manufacture silicon wafers for quantum-computing chips, and that it will spend $9 billion more over the next five years to develop quantum supercomputers.

The race is on to secure memory and storage chips, especially those known as DRAM and NAND flash memory, that transfer data and store information on devices. AI companies use those chips to help train and run large language models, coding agents and other tools.

The industry that makes those chips, meanwhile, which includes South Korea’s SK Hynix, Micron and Samsung Electronics, is contending with a memory crunch. The problem has already started to drive up the cost of consumer electronics, from Macs and iPads to Xboxes.

Declines for software companies like Workday, Adobe and ServiceNow were less pronounced Tuesday than IBM’s selloff, but the idea that AI spending is crowding out other parts of companies’ tech budgets rattled software stocks.

Salesforce, Workday, Adobe and ServiceNow all fell more than 5% in the first few minutes of trading before rebounding to end the day down 2.1%, 3.5%, 4.3% and 5.8%, respectively. Investor fears about software budget crowdout likely lessened upon a close read of the IBM warning, Luria said, which cited a key driver of the weakness as a shortfall in demand for the z17 mainframe. Most software companies don’t sell mainframe computers.


by
| 882 views | | 20 replies (last ) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kxj5zrw0

20 replies (most recent on top)

@g8 hahaha so sweet summer child. The way they use pip and coaching. The way they have warped and manipulated the system is proof alone that they are Jedi masters of layoffs in the USA.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @gd+1kxj5zrw0

@fq They do, but they have much stronger employment laws so its harder to fire or layoff people than it is in the US. Thats not to say that they can't layoff people, but its harder to do, takes longer, and they have to pay out more when doing it

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @g8+1kxj5zrw0

@fv yes, I hate Arvind. He completely deserves any hate I can give and frankly deserves far more than I'm able to give.

Sadly, I cannot be his retribution so hopefully his shady dealings will put him in a bright orange jumpsuit - though probably not until we have a new president 😥

Indian HR bot, you have a very limited vocabulary. When you use AI, tell it to stop using the words, "vile" and "spew". You sound like a f o o l.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @g7+1kxj5zrw0

@dq

The dehumanizing of Arvind, the hate, and bile being spewed ends right here. Right now.

Arvind and his executive team are competent professionals and IBM will recover. It always has

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @fv+1kxj5zrw0

@cq Really hoping that some day boards of directors will defer bonuses to executives based on stock and financial performance. Payout should be staged in small increments at first and larger increments not given until performance meets healthy sales and profitability. Do companies outside the US do this?

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @fq+1kxj5zrw0

A word of encouragement and prayers to the employees at IBM and the company. Hoping for the best for you and your families.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @fn+1kxj5zrw0

@dn
You are going to hurt yourself, overthinking about ways to justify the despicable slimy Indian way running IBM to the ground.
No excuses will erase failures of the slimy Indian

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @dq+1kxj5zrw0

As you may recall, Elon Musk’s SpaceX drastically dropped in value. Unfortunate but this happens to companies. Now can you quickly pivot and adjust your strategy and execute on that strategy?

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @dn+1kxj5zrw0

@cq
Agreed, the slimy Indian should be stripped of his wealth and clothes and sent back to India. He can start a new life in a slump.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @cr+1kxj5zrw0

Arvind received $30,000,000 in compensation for being a complete failure. He won’t suffer one day for it, but plenty of us will be unemployed and without healthcare because of his failures, and none of us will come close to seeing a fraction of that type of money in our lifetimes. Best we can hope for now is that they investigate the sht out of him for this weeks stock nonsense and put him in prison.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @cq+1kxj5zrw0

Just broke through the May low of $212. Next stop $199.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @c3+1kxj5zrw0

@ba

You have no way of knowing with certainty about the extend of my knowledge.
I can assure you, Alvind, the slimy Indian, is despised by many in his inner circle.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @br+1kxj5zrw0

What happened to the 1b from chips act for Quant?

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @bj+1kxj5zrw0

@b3

You're now inventing motives, emotions, and conversations that you have no way of knowing, while adding insults about Arvinds nationality.

claiming you know he's "in despair," demanding a larger package, or "planning to cash his loot" is pure speculation, not evidence.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ba+1kxj5zrw0

It does not look good this morning, the pre-market IBM share is hovering around $220.
Expect some serious bleeding today.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @b6+1kxj5zrw0

Where was AI BOB ? if anyone knew this was going to happen, it should have been BOB

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @b5+1kxj5zrw0

@ay
I agree, yesterday was a tough day for Alvind, the slimy Indian. He saw his $100 Millions bonus shrink. He is in despair throwing tantrums. He is asking and imploring the board to increase his package. He did not see this debacle coming this early, right at the time he was planning to cash his loot.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @b3+1kxj5zrw0

this is funny watching this incompetently managed company fall apart like this and the clueless management had absolutely no idea this was going to happen, 25% of the company's market value evaporates in a day ! POOF ! gone.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @b2+1kxj5zrw0

I wonder if Watson could have predicted all of this happening ?

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @b1+1kxj5zrw0

Yesterday was a tough day for Arvind and IBM's leadership. No one wants to see a sharp decline in the stock price.

But one difficult day doesn't define a company with more than a century of innovation. The next chapter will be written by how IBM responds, executes, and continues to innovate. I'm optimistic about the long term.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ay+1kxj5zrw0

Post a reply

: