- IBM lost ~25% on Tuesday after warning AI infrastructure spend is crowding out software budgets — its worst single-day drop on record.
- Under the hood the tape rotated, it didn't sell off: Nasdaq +0.90%, S&P +0.38%, Dow flat on the IBM drag alone, and CrowdStrike ripped +12% on the same day.
- The story to watch today is whether that split holds — cyber and AI-infra names bid, legacy software offered, with big-bank earnings and Warsh's Fed-pivot language as the swing factors.
IBM lost a quarter of its market cap in a single session. Not on a fraud, not on a guide-down of a niche product line, on a message the whole software industry has been dodging for eighteen months: enterprise customers are being asked to pick between renewing SaaS contracts and buying GPU capacity, and they are increasingly picking the GPUs. The AI capex boom the market has been paying growth multiples for just started billing itself to the software layer.
What moved overnight
The headline print was IBM at $217, down 25.2% — the worst single-day drop in the stock’s history per newsroom recaps. The company’s Q2 warning explicitly named “software budget compression” from customers redirecting spend to AI infrastructure. Oracle got dragged in sympathy after S&P downgraded it to BBB, one notch above junk. SK Hynix sparked an overnight chip wobble that had futures pointing lower before the cash open.
The cash session then did something interesting: it split. The Nasdaq closed at 26,107 (+0.90%), the S&P at 7,543 (+0.38%), the Russell at 2,964 (+0.39%) — and the Dow was essentially flat at 52,508 (+0.02%), because IBM alone dragged roughly a hundred index points out of it. The 10-year finished at 4.58% (down about 2 bp) after the June CPI came in cooler than expected. VIX drifted down to 16.5. This was not a risk-off day. This was a rotation dressed up as one.
The single-name prints worth flagging: CrowdStrike +12.1% on the same tape that killed IBM. Goldman Sachs +9.0% on a bank-earnings beat, Citi -5.3% on a miss — full recap in yesterday’s Movers. CleanSpark +8.8%, NVIDIA +4.1%, and BTC held around $64k. The money is not leaving equities. It is picking sides.
Trending in markets right now
The conversation online has snapped into two camps almost overnight. One camp — the “AI-is-a-hardware-story” camp — is treating IBM as the proof text: every dollar into a hyperscaler contract is a dollar not into a legacy license renewal, and companies like ServiceNow, Salesforce and Oracle now have to argue their agentic-AI roadmaps against a customer that is already writing seven-figure GPU cheques. The other camp is arguing the opposite: that IBM specifically has a hybrid-cloud problem, that CrowdStrike’s +11% is telling you cyber is a mandatory line item AI cannot displace, and that Wednesday’s bank prints will reset the discussion entirely.
Google search interest is surging on “IBM stock crash” and “AI capex software” — the second query barely existed a week ago. Yahoo Finance’s most-viewed list has IBM, CrowdStrike, Goldman and NVIDIA sitting next to each other, which is a rare cross-section of what a rotation looks like in real time. The retail mood online is more measured than the price action suggests: less “sell software” and more “figure out which SaaS names have an actual agentic story.” That distinction matters, because it means the setup for Wednesday is less about direction and more about dispersion. Live movers and reader-popular articles here.
Three things to watch today
Bank earnings dispersion. The Goldman beat / Citi miss on Tuesday set a template, not a trend. Wednesday’s tranche will tell you whether trading revenues are carrying the group or whether net interest margins are the constraint. A clean sweep of beats with soft NIM guidance would rhyme with the cooler CPI and add fuel to the rate-cut path.
Fed speakers around Warsh’s regime-change line. Fed Chair Warsh’s “regime change” language on Tuesday — that inflation is a “tax” and the current path is “not mission accomplished” — reads hawkish on tone but was delivered on a day the 10-year fell. That gap between rhetoric and pricing usually closes within a session or two.
Any software-name commentary before the close. If a ServiceNow, Salesforce, Adobe or Workday executive volunteers a defensive line about AI budget cannibalisation on the tape today, the IBM re-rate becomes a sector re-rate. If none of them do — and the tape holds Tuesday’s split — the read is that IBM was an IBM problem, not a software problem.
Bottom line
The correct posture into Wednesday is watching dispersion, not the index. The S&P closing +0.38% on a day IBM lost a quarter of its cap and a Dow component went flat is the tell — the buyers stepped up in exactly the names the sellers were fleeing. Whether that split holds is the question, and the answer will not come from the index level. It will come from what CrowdStrike, ServiceNow and the second-tranche banks do relative to IBM’s tape today. Watch the ratios, not the tape.
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