This past week was another brutal one for software companies, as evidenced by the big stock declines you see here (as of market close on Feb 7). This week may have been better for some than the week before, but not by much. Some observers are starting to refer to what’s happening as the “SaaS apocalypse.” Fox Business called it a “$1 trillion rout in U.S. software giants” and labeled it “the software Armageddon.”
Just what exactly happened this first week of February to cause the latest shock to the industry? A single move by an AI company juggernaut. As Fast Company put it, one Anthropic update wiped billions off software stocks. It begins: “Investors fear Claude Cowork’s new agentic features threaten entire categories of SaaS tools.” The article continues:
“Tech workers have been worried for years about the AI tidal wave coming for their jobs, but their bosses are starting to worry now, too.
“Stocks plunged this week as fears escalated that AI advancements will take a bite out of business for many software, data, and professional services companies. The market losses are tied to updates to Anthropic’s AI-powered workplace productivity suite, Claude Cowork, which threatens to replace some software tools ubiquitous in the professional world.”
But despite many in the tech world piling on to the prevailing opinion that enterprise software is dead, there are a few voices speaking out with a viewpoint that all is not lost for the software industry. One example is cited in the closing paragraph of the above Fast Company article:
“Not everyone deeply invested in AI agrees. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang swatted away worries that AI would eat the traditional software industry after the stock bloodbath that began on Tuesday. ‘There’s this notion that the tool in the software industry is in decline, and will be replaced by AI,’ Huang said, emphasizing that relying on existing software tools makes more sense than reinventing the wheel. ‘It is the most illogical thing in the world, and time will prove itself.’ ”
Another skeptic is Steven Sinofsky, a former Microsoft exec who’s a board partner at Andreessen Horowitz (a16z). Here’s a (long) opinion piece he published this week: Death of Software. Nah. Additionally, an article in The Economist argued a bit against the prevailing dire view: Why software stocks are getting pummelled. Are investors overestimating the risk from AI? (May require a free subscription.)
And the Fox Business article cited above ends with this note: “Despite the stock market turbulence this week, the Dow Jones managed to cross the historic 50,000 level, underscoring the continued exuberance surrounding the AI race.”
For a fascinating, deep-dive analysis of the situation, Ignite Insights published this (very long) post on its Substack just days ago: The Great SaaS Unbundling. Where Software Value Actually Goes When Agents Arrive. (May require subscription.)
So, experts and pundits are weighing in on both sides. But, of course, the story is still being written. What’s your take? Timmaron Group’s Founder and CEO Barb Stinnett has a long history in software, cloud, and AI. To chat with her, schedule a call by contacting hi@timmarongroup.com.