Recent advancements in artificial intelligence have sent shockwaves through countless industries, sparking widespread fears that core services could soon become obsolete. Nowhere is this panic more pronounced than in the software sector, where an unfolding โSaaS-pocalypseโ has erased billions in market value as investors fret over AIโs potential to commoditize everything from productivity tools to enterprise platforms.ย
Intuit (INTU) was already experiencing a decline before the late-January wave of AI-driven selling intensified, but theย panic accelerated its slide. From its all-time high near $814 last July, INTU stock has plummeted 47% to current levels around $440. Yet this selloff appears overdoneโIntuit is not only positioned to survive the SaaS-pocalypse but is also poised to thrive in the AI era.
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The Roots of Intuitโs Pre-Panic Slide
Even before the latest AI fears erupted, Intuit faced mounting pressure that weighed on its valuation. Investors grew concerned about aย cooling growth trajectory, highlighted by softer Q3 guidance calling for just 10% revenue growth compared to the 17% posted in the prior quarter. Integration challenges with the Mailchimp acquisition continued to drag on the Global Business Solutions segment, even as core offerings like QuickBooks delivered robust 21% growth ex-Mailchimp.ย
Broader market dynamics compounded the issue: a sharp contraction in the stockโsย price-to-earnings multipleโfrom above 50x to roughly 25xโreflected higher interest rates and a recalibration of software-sector expectations. From late November through late February, these factors alone drove aย roughly 35% decline, setting the stage for the accelerated drop once AI panic took hold.
Why the Market Initially Feared AI Disruption
Theย software selloff intensified in late January as investors fixated on AIโs ability to automate complex tasks once considered moat-protected. For Intuit, the spotlight fell squarely on TurboTax and QuickBooks. Headlines about tools like Claude Cowork and lingering ChatGPT tax-filing speculation fueled worries that consumers and small businesses could bypass Intuitโs platforms entirely.ย
Critics argued that general-purpose AI could handle basic tax preparation and accounting workflows, eroding the need for specialized software subscriptions. This narrative triggered indiscriminate selling across SaaS names, with Intuit caught in the crossfire despite its decades of embedded compliance expertise and customer data. The result was aย swift acceleration of an already softening stock, wiping out nearly $100 billion in market value over six months and pushing shares to multi-year lows.
Analysts Highlight Resilience Amid the Turmoil
Wall Street has pushed back against the doomsday narrative. Jefferiesโ proprietary AI Risk Matrix and At-Risk Basketโnow down 24% year-to-date (YTD)โflag vulnerable software names but explicitly exclude Intuit from the highest-risk cohort. Instead, analysts named Intuit their โtop large-cap pick in apps,โ citing its massive data moat: 80 different AI model variations trained on more than 40 years of data across roughly 100 million customers. Embedded workflows, regulatory expertise, and scale create barriers that general-purpose AI tools cannot easily replicate.ย
Mizuho echoed this view, calling recent AI disruption fears โoverblownโ and reiterating an โOutperformโ rating while characterizing Intuit as among the most resilient names in its Software AI Resilience Framework. The firm emphasized Intuitโs integrated data, compliance edge, and end-to-end workflows as durable advantages.
Overall, Wall Street remains constructive.ย Thirty-one analysts rate INTU a consensus "Moderate Buy," with an averageย price target hovering near $631โimplying more than 43% upside potential from current levels despite recent downward revisions from a handful of firms.
Key Takeaway
Beneath the headline volatility, Intuitโs underlying business continues to perform exceptionally well. The company is growing its top line at a rapid clipโ17% year-over-year revenue growth to $4.65 billion in fiscal Q2,ย beating estimatesโwhile generating substantial free cash flow. That cash engine supports aggressive capital returns: Intuit repurchased $961 million of stock in fiscal Q2 alone, with $3.5 billion still authorized.ย
On theย dividend front, the board just approved a quarterly payout of $1.20 per share, a 15% increase, keeping the payout ratio low at roughly 30%. The company now boasts 14 consecutive years of dividend raises, with a 16% compound annual growth rate over the past decade.
In a sector gripped by AI panic, Intuit stands out as a beaten-down dividend growth stock with the fundamentals and moat to not only survive the SaaS-pocalypse but deliver lasting shareholder value long after the panic subsides.
On the date of publication, Rich Duprey did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. For more information please view the Barchart Disclosure Policy here.
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