Investors can’t seem to sell software stocks fast enough amid fears that artificial intelligence (AI) will ultimately disrupt and displace traditional software-as-a-service (SaaS) businesses.
Many of the top software companies have enjoyed lofty valuations for years, justified by wide tech stock moats that meant juicy profit margins, limited competition, and sticky recurring revenue. But AI could vaporize some of those advantages. AI can already extract information from documents and write code, and could soon begin replacing humans in various office tasks.
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While AI is a genuine threat to some software companies, the relentless, widespread sell-off has mispriced some high-quality names. Here are two cheap tech stocks that investors should consider buying right now.
Corporations will almost always invest in efficiency, which is how ServiceNow (NYSE: NOW) became one of the world’s most prominent software companies. Its cloud-based technology enables enterprises to streamline, automate, and monitor various actions and workflows, such as submitting a support ticket to IT or assigning a customer complaint to the appropriate service rep.
ServiceNow has aggressively leaned into AI, likely because AI agents are moving toward similar capabilities over time. Most companies would rather avoid uprooting systems that handle daily business activities, and proactively offering AI tools makes it less likely that a new competitor can come in and tempt companies to replace ServiceNow.
The stock now trades at just 25 times its forward earnings estimates following a 54% plunge from its highs. That’s a compelling price for a leading software business that analysts still estimate will grow earnings by nearly 24% annually over the long term. ServiceNow’s tumble may wind up looking like an obvious buying opportunity in hindsight.
Millions of people and businesses manage their credit, file their taxes, or run their businesses with Intuit (NASDAQ: INTU) apps. Those would include TurboTax, Credit Karma, QuickBooks, and Mailchimp. Intuit’s stock has taken a beating in recent weeks, sliding more than 50% off its high. At a price-to-earnings ratio of just over 25, the valuation hasn’t been anywhere near this low in more than 10 years. But is Intuit this cheap because of AI disruption? I don’t think so, and here’s why.
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