Software stocks experienced their best month since 2001 in May, largely driven by strong earnings from Snowflake and Okta. This rebound suggests that fears of an AI-induced downturn, dubbed the “SaaSpocalypse,” might be exaggerated, as many companies demonstrate resilience and even leverage AI for growth.
Despite the broader tech sector’s volatility, key software players are showing renewed investor confidence. Snowflake’s significant deal with Amazon and Okta’s focus on AI-driven security needs highlight the ongoing demand for essential software solutions in the evolving technological landscape.
Software Stocks Rebound: AI Fears Subside as Companies Show Resilience
The much-feared "SaaSpocalypse" may not be entirely over, but anxieties surrounding the demise of software stocks have significantly cooled, thanks to a robust performance this past week. Driven by stellar results from key players like Snowflake and Okta, the software sector demonstrated its ability to navigate the disruptive wave of artificial intelligence, proving Wall Street's initial fears might have been overstated.
Sridhar Ramaswamy, CEO of Snowflake, rings The Closing Bell at the New York Stock Exchange on Sept. 30, 2025. (NYSE)
The iShares Expanded Tech-Software exchange-traded fund (ETF) saw a remarkable 8% surge this week, culminating in a 21% gain for May. This marks the ETF's best monthly performance since October 2001. While the earlier rebound was during the dot-com bust, the current rally emerges as concerns about AI's impact continue to reverberate across the technology landscape. Previously, software stocks had faced significant pressure over the last year due to advancements in AI, particularly the rise of "vibe coding" tools that enable rapid app and website development.
Despite the year-to-date challenges, with the iShares software ETF still down 3.8% compared to the Nasdaq's 18% gain, recent performances have injected much-needed optimism. Snowflake, a data platform provider, was a significant catalyst, experiencing its best trading day ever on Thursday and a nearly 50% jump in the four trading days following a recent holiday. This surge followed the announcement of a substantial $6 billion cloud and chip deal with Amazon and an upward revision of its guidance, attributed to customers increasingly adopting AI tools.
Snowflake CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy noted, "We're also seeing customers deploy and scale workloads at a faster pace." Analysts at Argus Research have labeled Snowflake a crucial "picks and shovels" play on generative AI, raising their price target and highlighting the company's core business of unifying and harmonizing data as essential for exploiting GenAI benefits.
Okta, an identity and access management company, also emerged as a strong performer, with its stock climbing a record 30% on Friday. The company reported better-than-expected earnings, signaling that the shift to agentic AI is prompting businesses to bolster their identity security and defend against automated threats. "AI products are going to take longer, but every organization is going to build and deploy agents," stated Okta CEO Todd McKinnon. "It's fundamental infrastructure that's going to be required over the next few years."
Other software companies also saw significant gains. Atlassian climbed 26% for the week, and ServiceNow surged over 20%. Shopify, Workday, and Asana each posted gains of at least 14%. In the realm of cloud infrastructure providers, Oracle jumped 16%, and Microsoft rose nearly 8%. However, Microsoft, despite recent gains, remains down almost 7% for the year, positioning it as the weakest performer among tech's megacaps.
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