Back to News
quantum-computing

IBM Lost $31 Billion in 1 Day on AI Fears. Should You Buy the Dip?

The Motley Fool
Loading...
4 min read
0 likes
⚡ Quantum Brief
IBM’s market cap plunged $31 billion in a single day after Anthropic’s AI tools threatened its COBOL-dependent mainframe business, with shares dropping 13% before rebounding 2.7% the following session. Anthropic claimed its Claude AI can automate COBOL modernization, citing a shrinking pool of engineers trained in the legacy language, which underpins IBM’s mainframe revenue—23% of total sales. IBM countered that AI-driven code translation is trivial compared to decades-old system integrations, highlighting its own watsonX Code Assistant for Z mainframes launched in 2024 as proof of adaptation. Despite the sell-off, IBM’s stock remains up 76% over three years, with 2026 projections showing 5% revenue growth and $15.7 billion in free cash flow, though AI disruption risks persist for its consulting and software segments. Analysts suggest the market may have overreacted, but with muted growth compared to AI-focused peers, IBM’s long-term resilience hinges on balancing legacy systems with emerging tech investments.
IBM Lost $31 Billion in 1 Day on AI Fears. Should You Buy the Dip?

Summarize this article with:

Are AI tools from Anthropic and other players on the verge of disrupting IBM's growth story?IBM (IBM +2.71%) stock got hit hard in Monday's trading as fears that artificial-intelligence (AI) technologies could disrupt the company's common business-oriented language (COBOL) tech stack. The company's share price fell more than 13% in the daily session, wiping roughly $31 billion off the legacy tech giant's market capitalization. After yesterday's big sell-off, the stock is seeing a modest recovery. Shares were up 2.7% as of 3 p.m. ET. IBM stock is now down roughly 22% across this year's trading. Image source: Getty Images. Investors are worried Anthropic and other AI leaders could disrupt IBM In a blog post yesterday, Anthropic said that AI tools could help modernize systems based on COBOL code. Anthropic is the company behind Claude, one of the leading AI tech platforms, and said in its post that the system's coding tools could be used to automate the experimentation, analysis, and implementation phases associated with modernizing COBOL-based systems. The blog post also pointed out that COBOL is taught at only a handful of universities and that the pool of engineers capable of reading the code is becoming increasingly difficult. In response, IBM said that translating COBOL was the easy part and that the real work is "data architecture redesign, runtime replacement, transaction processing integrity, and hardware-accelerated performance built over decades of tight software and hardware coupling." The company's spokesperson also noted that new AI tools are emerging every week and pointed to the launch of its watsonX Code Assistant for its Z mainframe two years ago as an example of its own initiatives to use artificial intelligence to modernize code. Is IBM stock a buy after its big pullback? While IBM's cloud software businesses have been at the heart of its recent growth, mainframe sales still account for a sizable portion of revenue -- and investors are worried that AI tools could cut into the business. Mainframe sales accounted for 23% of the company's overall revenue last year, and mainframe-related software accounted for roughly 29% of overall software sales. ExpandNYSE: IBMInternational Business MachinesToday's Change(2.71%) $6.06Current Price$229.41Key Data PointsMarket Cap$209BDay's Range$223.65 - $236.5452wk Range$214.50 - $324.90Volume698KAvg Vol4.8MGross Margin58.06%Dividend Yield3.01% While IBM stock has seen a big valuation pullback this year, the stock is still up 76% over the last three years. Shares are currently valued at roughly 18.5 times this year's expected earnings. The company also pays a dividend yielding roughly 2.9%, but sales and earnings growth have been proceeding at more moderate paces compared to other tech companies with exposure to AI trends. IBM's revenue hit $67.5 billion last year, up 8% annually -- or 6% on a currency-adjusted basis. Meanwhile, the company is guiding for currency-adjusted revenue growth of roughly 5%. Free cash flow for the year is projected to come in at roughly $15.7 billion -- up approximately 7% annually. The impact of Claude Code and other AI tools on COBOL and IBM's mainframe business is difficult to estimate at this point, and it's possible the market has significantly overreacted to the potential threat. The company's entrenched legacy sales base, reputation for reliability, and internally developed tools could allow it to weather AI-driven modernization shifts. On the other hand, the risks that new artificial technologies pose to some of the company's consulting and software businesses and overall growth story can't be completely discounted. With growth already looking relatively muted compared to other big players in the tech space, I think there are better buys right now. Read NextFeb 10, 2026 •By James BrumleyPrediction: This Overlooked Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Could Be the Surprise Winner of 2026Feb 2, 2026 •By James HiresForget Rigetti Computing: Serious Investors Are Placing Their Chips on This Enterprise‑Ready Quantum PlatformFeb 1, 2026 •By Geoffrey SeilerIBM Shares Pop on Strong AI Growth.

Is It Too Late to Buy the Stock?Jan 31, 2026 •By Timothy GreenThis 'Outdated' IBM Technology Just Did Something It Hasn't Done in 20 YearsJan 29, 2026 •By Keith SpeightsForget Rigetti Computing: This Quantum Veteran With Real Cash Flow Is the Smarter Long‑Term BetJan 28, 2026 •By Scott LevineWhy IBM Stock Is Soaring in After-Hours TradingAbout the AuthorKeith Noonan is a contributing writer at The Motley Fool covering technology, consumer goods, and other sectors. He holds a bachelor’s degree in English from Boston College.TMFNoonsStocks MentionedInternational Business MachinesNYSE: IBM$229.41 (+2.71%) $+6.06*Average returns of all recommendations since inception. Cost basis and return based on previous market day close.

Read Original

Source Information

Source: The Motley Fool