Software stocks are once again disappointing investors, showing signs of reverting after a brief surge earlier in the month. The iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV), which had recently bounced about 15% from its low on February 23, is now back in negative territory. Key players in the industry, including Adobe, have underscored how rapidly optimism can evaporate in the current market climate, demonstrating that the recent recovery may have been oversold amid the ongoing AI hype.
The recent uptick saw not only the IGV but also various individual stocks, including Cloudflare, CrowdStrike, Datadog, Intuit, and Thomson Reuters, experience double-digit gains. However, by the end of last week, it became clear that the momentum was stalling. A few stocks remained positive, while many others in the software and cloud sectors began to decline. This shift has led some analysts to categorize recent movements as more of a trading opportunity rather than a signal of robust long-term leadership.
Technical indicators appear to bear out this caution. Following a solid rally from the February lows, the IGV ran into significant resistance around the 88 mark — a critical Fibonacci retracement level. This level likely prompted short-sellers to engage, demonstrating the market’s reluctance to sustain upward movement. In contrast to strong leadership, which typically manages to breach resistance and generate reconsideration from skeptics, the software sector failed to make that transition.
Particularly notable is Adobe, which has become emblematic of investor frustration. Following a disappointing earnings report and an unexpected change in leadership, its stock plummeted approximately 25% year-to-date. Historically, Adobe reached its peak in late 2021 but has struggled to regain that momentum ever since, now approaching levels not seen since 2019. Such stagnation has left many investors uneasy about the company’s trajectory.
The broader implications of AI, which initially seemed promising for boosting the software sector, now present a mixed bag. Despite corporations touting new AI functionalities that promise productivity gains and smarter workflows, investors are seeking tangible evidence of AI’s capacity to enhance pricing, protect profit margins, and generate new revenue streams. Until software companies can prove that AI represents a significant growth opportunity rather than merely a catchphrase, the jury remains out on its relevance.
Lee Munson, president and chief investment officer at Portfolio Wealth Advisors, conveyed skepticism during a recent interview, expressing that software multiples could decrease. He also compared the situation to the ups and downs of dating, reflecting the familiar yet fragile relationship many investors have with the stocks in this sector.
For software stocks to transition from mere trading rebounds to credible long-term leadership, two conditions are likely essential: reclaiming and maintaining critical technical resistance levels, along with substantiated evidence that AI is evolving into a favorable business driver. Until those benchmarks are met, the industry may continue to resemble a trading environment rather than a sector worth pursuing aggressively.


