The closing price of the IBM shares has been about $249.38 with the increasing concerns about the use of AI, but past history shows that the technology conglomerate has withstood severe market declines.
Proven Crisis Fighter
More than fifteen significant market upheavals have played out in robustness; nonetheless, IBM has been negatively contracting on average -16 % which is equivalent to the S&P 500.
This is indicative of the fact that the company is moving in the same direction as the general market performance in distress.
However, more drastic slumps like the COVID-19 crisis that caused a 37% decrease versus 34% decrease in the case of the S&P, the oil price nosedive that induced a 36% decrease versus 6.8% fall in the instance of the benchmark and the 2008 financial crisis.
This caused a 35% deduction compared to 53% fall in the case of the S&P, revealing the vulnerability of IBM in times of demand shrinkage, a fact intensified by the presence of AI competitors.
Recent AI Jolt
In February, one negative incident led to a 13% decline in one trading day, its largest loss in the last 25 years after the introduction of Anthropic’s Claude Code which posed a competitive threat to the IBM offerings in the mainframe service business.
IBM reported adjusted earnings per share of $4.52, which was $0.23 higher than the analyst estimate of $4.29. Revenue exceeded the consensus estimate of $19.22 billion, rising 12% Y-o-Y (9% at constant currency) to $19.7 billion.
As of right now, the company’s generative AI book of business is worth over $12.5 billion.
IBM chairman, president and chief executive officer Arvind Krishna said:
“In the fourth quarter, we delivered strong revenue growth, with double-digit Software performance. Additionally, Infrastructure continued its double-digit revenue growth with the robust adoption of the next generation of our mainframe platform,”
Outlook Ahead
IBM’s strategic focus on the Watsonx platform and hybrid cloud architecture puts the company in a position to benefit from AI advancements without being impacted by them.
The stability it provides because of its core mainframe ecosystem and 3% dividend yield will act as a buffer, even though the short-term declines in demand may be painful.
Strict analytical analysis reveals that businesses continue to discriminate against established scalability through creative code conversion solutions.
As a result, IBM will be more resilient in an AI-enabled market contraction than pure disruptors, which are likely to grow stronger before the next economic boom occurs. This viewpoint is in line with current market-level thinking.