Close Menu
Live Media NewsLive Media News
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • World
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Auto
  • Sports
  • Travel
What's Hot

Greek Economy Strong GDP Growth That Millions of Ordinary Citizens Simply Cannot Feel

17 April 2026

The Foreign Direct Investment Numbers That Show Greece Is Attracting Capital — but Not the Right Kind

17 April 2026

Australian Share Market Today: Why the ASX 200 Just Had Its Worst Week in a Month

17 April 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Sunday, April 19
Contact
News in your area
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram TikTok
  •  Weather
  •  Markets
Live Media NewsLive Media News
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • World
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Auto
  • Sports
  • Travel
Live Media NewsLive Media News
  • Greece
  • Politics
  • World
  • Economy
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Travel
Home»News
News

IBM Stock Is Down 17% This Year — But Is the Selloff Actually an Opportunity?

News TeamBy News Team2 April 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email Copy Link
Follow Us
Google News
Ibm stock
Ibm stock
Share
Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Telegram Email

The daily volatility of the ticker tape seems almost academic from IBM’s offices in Armonk, New York, which are situated far enough away from Wall Street. However, it hasn’t mattered as much this year as it usually does. From a 52-week high of $324.90 to about $243 as of early April, the stock has fallen by about 17% since January. This decline is severe enough to cause even patient investors to reconsider. However, there is a sense that the stock price and the underlying business may be telling two very different stories based on the way the company has been spending its time lately.

It is difficult to get enthusiastic about IBM. For a long time, it hasn’t. Older technology companies, those based on mainframes and punch cards, decades of government contracts, and enterprise sales cycles measured in years rather than quarters, are subject to a particular kind of skepticism. All of that history is carried by IBM, and when markets are in the mood for novelty, they often overlook the past. They certainly are at the moment. The sweetheart is Nvidia. Investors are chasing the most glamorous names in the AI infrastructure gold rush, and IBM is not one of those names. It has never been.

International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) — key information

Full name International Business Machines Corporation
Ticker symbol NYSE: IBM
Headquarters Armonk, New York, USA
Current stock price $243.14 USD (as of April 2, 2026)
Market capitalization $228.07 billion
52-week high / low $324.90 / $214.50
YTD performance −17%
P/E ratio 19.66
Dividend yield 2.76% ($1.68 quarterly)
Q4 2025 revenue $19.69B (+12.15% year-on-year)
LTM revenue $67.5 billion (+7.6% growth)
Key recent partnerships Arm (dual-architecture hardware), Nvidia (AI storage & cloud)
Official investor relations ibm.com/investor

However, IBM has been doing something intriguing over the past few months: establishing alliances that imply it knows exactly where the AI economy is going and that it plans to be essential to the aspect of it that no one discusses. The unglamorous aspect. Information. infrastructure.

The plumbing. IBM and Arm announced a partnership on April 2 to create dual-architecture hardware for AI and data-intensive tasks. The strategy entails integrating Arm’s architecture with IBM’s enterprise system capabilities and investigating virtualization technologies that would enable Arm-based software environments to operate inside IBM’s computing platforms. This type of announcement probably ought to make headlines, but it doesn’t.

IBM and Nvidia previously announced a partnership encompassing storage, analytics, intelligent document processing, hybrid cloud, and consulting at Nvidia’s GTC conference in mid-March. The competitive advantage that is hidden within most large organizations is being drained by fragmented data, and there is no way to fix that without a serious data management strategy, according to IBM’s storage general manager Sam Werner.

The underlying observation isn’t incorrect, but it’s possible that Werner is exaggerating the issue because IBM frequently presents its own products as the only rational solutions. The majority of big businesses, especially telecom companies that date back to the 19th century, have massive data repositories that they are genuinely unable to access or combine without substantial assistance.

IBM uses Nestlé as an example, which is instructive. By collaborating with IBM and Nvidia, Nestlé was able to cut costs by 83% while reducing data refresh times on its global Order-to-Cash system from 15 minutes to three minutes, processing terabytes across 186 countries. That is an actual outcome. It’s unclear if this translates well to other clients, but IBM needs more tangible results like this to close deals and change the perception of the stock.

In terms of finances, the situation is more nuanced than the drop in share prices suggests. Revenue for the fourth quarter of 2025 was $19.69 billion, exceeding both EPS and revenue projections and up more than 12% year over year. IBM’s revenue increased by 7.6% to $67.5 billion over the previous 12 months. When compared to its earnings growth trajectory, the P/E ratio of approximately 19.66 seems reasonable. Currently yielding 2.76% with a quarterly payment of $1.68 per share, the dividend offers the kind of floor that income-focused investors typically value, particularly in a market this volatile. For more than a century, IBM has consistently paid dividends. Although that fact is often overlooked, it is important to acknowledge.

It’s difficult to ignore the tension in the current perception of IBM. The market appears to have concluded that a small number of chip manufacturers and cloud behemoths own the AI narrative. In some way, IBM, which operates more research facilities than any other industrial research organization in the world—19 across twelve countries—is being treated like an observer. There’s something wrong with that characterization.

It’s possible that the selloff is due to sound valuation adjustments rather than any underlying issues with the company, and that the stock is just correcting after an excessively long run. It’s also possible that investors are holding onto a business that is implementing AI while the market values it as if it were still IBM.

These things are sorted out by time. Currently, IBM’s AI strategy, partnerships, and data platform are not its biggest issues. It’s the narrative it’s telling and how slowly it’s coming to an end. Both the deals and the numbers are present. Simply put, the market hasn’t yet chosen to pay attention.

Follow Live Media News on Google News

Get Live Media News headlines in your feed — and add Live Media News as a preferred source in Google Search.

Stay updated

Follow Live Media News in Google News for faster access to breaking coverage, reporting, and analysis.

Follow on Google News Add to Preferred Sources
How to add Live Media News as a preferred source (Google Search):
  1. Search any trending topic on Google (for example: Greece news).
  2. On the results page, find the Top stories section.
  3. Tap Preferred sources and select Live Media News.
Tip: You can manage preferred sources anytime from Google Search settings.
30 seconds Following takes one tap inside Google News.
Preferred Sources Helps Google show more Live Media News stories in Top stories for you.
Ibm stock Ibm stock price

Keep Reading

Medical Insurance Relief Tax Credit: Are You Leaving €200 on the Table Every Year?

US Power Grid Infrastructure Investment: Why the Opportunity Is Measured in Trillions, Not Billions

SIPP Tax Relief Explained: The Government Is Literally Giving You Free Money — Are You Claiming It?

Illinois Tax Refund 2026: Why Your Money Might Be Taking Longer Than You Think to Arrive

The Stablecoin Bill is Stalled: Here’s How It Impacts Your Daily Crypto Trades

The Q2 2026 Stock Market Outlook Is Here — and the Word ‘Don’t Panic’ Appears More Than You’d Expect

Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Editors Picks

The Foreign Direct Investment Numbers That Show Greece Is Attracting Capital — but Not the Right Kind

17 April 2026

Australian Share Market Today: Why the ASX 200 Just Had Its Worst Week in a Month

17 April 2026

Dollar Tree Customer Experience Investment: The Risky Bet Behind Those Empty Shelves

17 April 2026

AGNC Investment Corp. Is Paying a 13.6% Dividend — But Is It Too Good to Be True?

17 April 2026

Latest Articles

How To File A Tax Extension Before April 15 — And Why It’s Smarter Than Filing a Rushed Return

16 April 2026

Stock Split Season Is Here — And These Are the Companies Wall Street Is Watching Most Closely

16 April 2026

CoreWeave Stock Forecast 2026: Revenue Projected at $12.4 Billion, Up 142% — If the Build-Out Goes to Plan

16 April 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) TikTok Instagram LinkedIn
© 2026 Live Media News. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Contact us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below.

Lost password?