8x8, Intuit, and Atlassian Shares Are Soaring, What You Need To Know

ⓘ This article is third-party content and does not represent the views of this site. We make no guarantees regarding its accuracy or completeness.

EGHT Cover Image

What Happened?

A number of stocks jumped in the afternoon session after investors continued to rotate into oversold enterprise software names amid profit taking in chip stocks. 

While the Nasdaq retreated and semiconductor leaders like Micron (-4%) sold off, major SaaS incumbents caught a strong bid. ServiceNow (NYSE: NOW) surged 4.3%, and Salesforce (NYSE: CRM) climbed 2.4%. The divergence occurred against a backdrop of rising oil prices and geopolitical tensions in the Middle East that weighed on the broader indices. It seems the AI trade is rotating from the infrastructure layer to the application layer. After months of paying premium multiples for the chips required to build artificial intelligence, investors appeared to be shifting capital into the software companies that are actually monetizing it. 

Earlier in 2026, software stocks suffered a severe valuation compression, dubbed the "SaaSpocalypse", driven by fears that AI agents would destroy traditional per-seat software licensing models. Recent data points, including ServiceNow raising its Now Assist AI contract target to $1.5 billion and Salesforce scaling its Agentforce platform, revealed that incumbents can sell AI as a premium add-on rather than watching it cannibalize their core business. Because enterprise SaaS providers own the proprietary data and daily workflows, they are positioned as the control layer for AI deployment. With semiconductor valuations stretched to historic premiums, capital continued to hunt for the margin of safety found in quality software stocks with depressed forward multiples. 

However, risks remain: if macroeconomic pressures force enterprise CIOs to consolidate vendors further, second-tier software names without clear AI monetization could still struggle.

The stock market overreacts to news, and big price drops can present good opportunities to buy high-quality stocks.

Among others, the following stocks were impacted:

Zooming In On 8x8 (EGHT)

8x8’s shares are extremely volatile and have had 57 moves greater than 5% over the last year. In that context, today’s move indicates the market considers this news meaningful but not something that would fundamentally change its perception of the business.

The previous big move we wrote about was 12 days ago when the stock gained 8.5% on the news that Guggenheim's John DiFucci upgraded both Salesforce and ServiceNow to Buy, arguing the AI-disruption fear that gutted the software sector during the year had pushed valuations too low. 

This was a valuation call from a skeptic, not an AI endorsement. DiFucci wrote he is "not upgrading because we see [ServiceNow] as an AI beneficiary," calling near-term AI monetization "unlikely to materialize" and AI risks "very real," while arguing the darkest scenario was already priced in (CRM at ~3.7x EV/recurring revenue; NOW's $125 target at 7.5x EV/NTM recurring revenue). 

The read-through was what lifted the group. When a previously cautious, highly ranked analyst flips to Buy on the two enterprise-SaaS bellwethers purely on valuation, it signals the "SaaSpocalypse" repricing overshot, de-risking the whole complex and inviting bargain-hunting across peers. Oracle's ~2% bounce added an independent second leg, driven by inclusion on William Blair's July Analyst Conviction List, a new AI product, and oversold conditions after the previous disclosure of a $40 billion AI-infrastructure raise. Together they extended a multi-week recovery.

8x8 is up 17.7% since the beginning of the year, but at $2.23 per share, it is still trading 19.4% below its 52-week high of $2.76 from May 2026. Despite the year-to-date gain, investors who bought $1,000 worth of 8x8’s shares 5 years ago would now be looking at only $83.90.

ONE MORE THING: The $21 AI Application Stock Wall Street Forgot. While Wall Street obsesses over who’s building AI, one company is already using it to print money. And nobody’s paying attention.

AI chip stocks trade at ridiculous valuations. This company processes a trillion consumer signals monthly using AI and trades at a third of the price. The gap won’t last. The institutions will figure it out. You need to see this first. Read the FREE Report Before They Notice.

Report this content

If you believe this article contains misleading, harmful, or spam content, please let us know.

Report this article

More News

View More

Recent Quotes

View More
Symbol Price Change (%)
AMZN  247.31
+1.97 (0.80%)
AAPL  317.31
+1.99 (0.63%)
AMD  534.39
-23.50 (-4.21%)
BAC  59.50
-0.17 (-0.28%)
GOOG  350.67
-4.36 (-1.23%)
META  656.73
-12.48 (-1.86%)
MSFT  390.99
+5.89 (1.53%)
NVDA  203.53
-7.43 (-3.52%)
ORCL  131.54
-9.10 (-6.47%)
TSLA  394.76
-13.00 (-3.19%)
Stock Quote API & Stock News API supplied by www.cloudquote.io
Quotes delayed at least 20 minutes.
By accessing this page, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms Of Service.