The week just passed taught IBM a costly lesson in market psychology. The technology giant had spent months burnishing its credentials as a flexible, open partner for artificial intelligence. Instead of reward, it got a seven-day slide of almost eight percent. The shares closed Friday at €217.00, leaving the stock down roughly 13 percent since the start of the year.
The trigger came from an unlikely source: IBM’s own research arm. The Institute for Business Value published a global survey of 1,000 executives, and the findings cut hard against the company’s narrative. Fully 71 percent of those polled said switching their primary AI provider would be difficult. Another 68 percent reported struggling with strict data-storage regulations. Worst of all, 91 percent of managers admitted they did not fully understand their own AI dependencies. The study was meant to position IBM as the solution to these very problems. The market instead read it as evidence that large-scale AI rollouts would face painful delays — delays that would push lucrative consulting fees further into the future.
Compounding the damage, rival Accenture slashed its full-year revenue forecast in mid-June after third-quarter bookings fell an unexpected two percent. The news sent Accenture’s own shares plunging more than 17 percent at the opening bell and triggered a sector-wide selloff. IBM, despite its software-heavy pivot, was dragged down as collateral damage. The company’s consulting division had already grown only one percent in the first quarter on a currency-adjusted basis. Against that backdrop, the Accenture warning looked like a verdict on the entire advisory industry.
Ironically, the fundamentals beneath the surface remain solid. IBM just delivered its strongest first quarter in a decade, with revenue up six percent and free cash flow climbing 13 percent. Generative AI now accounts for roughly 30 percent of the total order backlog — an impressive pipeline of signed contracts. The bottleneck is execution. Analysts warn that technical and regulatory hurdles are slowing customers’ ability to convert those contracts into recognized revenue, especially for the Watsonx platform.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying IBM?
The company has not been idle on the partnership front. In early June, it launched a new Google Cloud initiative designed to accelerate AI production deployment, while simultaneously deepening its collaboration with ServiceNow. Days before that, Nvidia named IBM a partner for its latest AI accelerators, briefly sending the stock six percent higher. The momentum evaporated quickly. Even with alliances alongside Google, Nvidia and ServiceNow, the share price ended the week nursing an eight percent loss — a stark illustration of how quickly positive sentiment can sour.
Technically, the stock is treading water near a critical level. The €217.00 close sits just above the 50-day moving average at €215.44, while the gap to the 200-day line has widened to €235.59. The relative strength index of 42.5 indicates neither oversold conditions nor fresh momentum. A 30-day volatility reading of nearly 68 percent underscores the extreme nervousness gripping the market. Analysts still see upside, with the average price target at €253.62, but that optimism rests on a fine thread.
All eyes are now on July 22, when IBM reports second-quarter results. A strong update on AI delivery could arrest the current downtrend. Until then, the stock remains hostage to the industry mood — and to the uncomfortable truth that IBM’s own research has become its most convincing bear argument.
Ad
IBM Stock: Buy or Sell?! New IBM Analysis from June 20 delivers the answer:
The latest IBM figures speak for themselves: Urgent action needed for IBM investors. Is it worth buying or should you sell? Find out what to do now in the current free analysis from June 20.
IBM: Buy or sell? Read more here...






