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CRM
Salesforce, Inc.
stock NYSE

Market Open
Feb 13, 2026 3:22:36 PM EST
189.44USD+2.163%(+4.01)10,210,637
185.00Bid   199.34Ask   14.34Spread
Pre-market
Feb 13, 2026 9:27:30 AM EST
186.99USD+0.841%(+1.56)32,959
After-hours
Feb 12, 2026 4:58:30 PM EST
185.60USD+0.065%(+0.12)0
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CRM Reddit Mentions
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We have sentiment values and mention counts going back to 2017. The complete data set is available via the API.
Take me to the API
CRM Specific Mentions
As of Feb 13, 2026 3:21:11 PM EST (1 min. ago)
Includes all comments and posts. Mentions per user per ticker capped at one per hour.
4 hr ago • u/ekonixlab • r/ValueInvesting • if_you_didnt_own_software_before_you_should_now • C
The data CRM owns should keep it very relevant and profitable for the foreseeable future
sentiment 0.49
5 hr ago • u/Beetlejuice_hero • r/stocks • the_money_i_never_invested_hurts_more_than_every • C
The answer to your mental quandary is to **always have a monthly/weekly S&P auto buy** that you never turn off.
Just have some skin in the game through all all the short/medium term chaos.
Another strategy is to sell puts so that you are forcefully assigned your shares once a stock drops. Don't do this with trash companies but you could be doing it with, say, META or CRM right now.
sentiment -0.36
5 hr ago • u/Menu-Quirky • r/thetagang • daily_rthetagang_discussion_thread_what_are_your • C
Sell to Open
1 Contract CRM Feb 20 2026 187.5 Put @ 5.75
sentiment -0.13
6 hr ago • u/iShitBloodandCumShit • r/wallstreetbets • daily_discussion_thread_for_february_13_2026 • C
Retail news: CRM PT downgrade. AKA someone wants to load up but wants retail to sell.
sentiment -0.16
6 hr ago • u/InvestingTheBest • r/ValueInvesting • value_stocks_with_a_sweet_dividend_cushion • C
CRM not talked about enough. Insane the prices this one has fallen to over AI scares
sentiment -0.77
7 hr ago • u/Traditional_Fox_6660 • r/stocks • reddits_top_30_stock_what_do_you_think_of_it • C
I compared them to YouTubers top 14 stocks(CRM, FOUR, VRT, UBER, ZETA, PYPL, NFLX, NVDA, META, MELI, ADBE, GOOGL, SOFI, AMZN ).
2026 the Portfolio 1-month return was -12.17 and for tge reddit picks it was -9 so you guys outperformed the youtubers
sentiment 0.20
7 hr ago • u/doolpicate • r/IndianStockMarket • why_nifty_it_is_falling • C
Ive setup:-
- a trading system that does does risk/trend/breadth related exposure planning for my portfolio
- A realtime voice CRM on plivo for a couple of firms that also routes to payments+CRM lead management
- An IOT routing/issue ranking
- A distributor management system that hands out incentives
- An invoice reconciliation system with a human in the loop
- A GR/IR system and reconciliation of fractional delivery/payments and payables
- A couple of bots that manage mailboxes per customer.
That's the last 8 months.
sentiment 0.32
8 hr ago • u/MarketRodeo • r/DeepFuckingValue • top_oversoldoverbought_stocks_february_13_2026 • News 🗞 • B
The Oversold/Overbought list shows stocks that are trading at extreme levels based on their Relative Strength Index (RSI), suggesting potential short-term reversals during the trading session.
## 📉 **Oversold Stocks:**
Stocks with RSI below 30, potentially indicating oversold conditions and possible upward reversals.
| Symbol | Company | RSI | Price | Change | %Change | Market Cap |
|:-------|:--------|:---:|:-----:|:------:|:-------:|:----------:|
| [AMZN](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/AMZN) | Amazon.com, Inc. | 23.59 | 199.60 | -4.48 | -2.20% | $2.1T |
| [TMO](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/TMO) | Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. | 21.90 | 509.82 | -17.35 | -3.29% | $191.5B |
| [CRM](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/CRM) | Salesforce, Inc. | 21.85 | 185.43 | +0.43 | +0.23% | $176.5B |
| [ISRG](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/ISRG) | Intuitive Surgical, Inc. | 29.11 | 478.60 | -17.52 | -3.53% | $170.0B |
| [UBER](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/UBER) | Uber Technologies, Inc. | 26.07 | 71.22 | +0.21 | +0.30% | $148.0B |
Source: [Oversold](https://marketrodeo.com/screener?rsiLowerThan=30&exchange=NASDAQ%2CNYSE%2CAMEX)
## 📈 **Overbought Stocks:**
Stocks with RSI above 70, potentially indicating overbought conditions and possible downward reversals.
| Symbol | Company | RSI | Price | Change | %Change | Market Cap |
|:-------|:--------|:---:|:-----:|:------:|:-------:|:----------:|
| [WMT](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/WMT) | Walmart Inc. | 73.05 | 133.64 | +4.87 | +3.78% | $1.1T |
| [JNJ](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/JNJ) | Johnson & Johnson | 85.09 | 244.55 | +3.69 | +1.53% | $589.2B |
| [PG](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/PG) | The Procter & Gamble Company | 74.05 | 161.21 | +1.21 | +0.76% | $376.7B |
| [CAT](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/CAT) | Caterpillar Inc. | 71.35 | 758.29 | -16.71 | -2.16% | $355.2B |
| [KO](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/KO) | The Coca-Cola Company | 70.26 | 79.00 | +0.40 | +0.51% | $339.8B |
Source: [Overbought](https://marketrodeo.com/screener?rsiMoreThan=70&exchange=NASDAQ%2CNYSE%2CAMEX)
**Understanding RSI:**
- **RSI < 30:** Potentially oversold (stock may be undervalued)
- **RSI > 70:** Potentially overbought (stock may be overvalued)
- **RSI 30-70:** Normal trading range
sentiment 0.55
8 hr ago • u/raytoei • r/ValueInvesting • software_stocks_are_investors_worrying_too_much • Industry/Sector • B
Software Stocks: Are Investors Worrying Too Much About AI Disruption?
Many stocks with strong competitive advantages have been caught up in the selloff and are now undervalued.
Michael Field, CFA
12 Feb 2026
https://global.morningstar.com/en-gb/markets/software-stocks-are-investors-worrying-too-much-about-ai-disruption
**Key Takeaways**
\- Shares in ‘hyperscalers’ like Microsoft, Amazon and Meta have sold off over fears about AI spending.
\- Investors worry that companies with valuable databases like RELX and Thomson Reuters are now vulnerable to AI disruption.
\-But switching costs are key to these companies’ wide economic moats.
There were several AI-induced selloffs last year, but the one at the start of February was different. This time it didn’t just affect the Magnificent Seven, and anything adjacent to the big company tech stocks. Even European stocks like Wolters Kluwer WKL or RELX REL that straddle the line between tech and business services were caught up in the crash.
**What’s Behind the US Tech Selloff?**
Microsoft MSFT, Meta Platforms META and Amazon AMZN, the “hyperscalers,” have announced increased capex spending, some 60% higher on aggregate in 2026. But this has been met with caution from investors. Solid earnings results aside, it seems many investors believe that continuing to scale up at this rate is akin to upping the ante at a poker card table. While they may have been happy with the level of capex investment 12 months ago, and the expected payback time, the bet is too rich for them now.
AI and disruption are words we hear a lot, so when AI firm Anthropic released a legal plug-in for their large language model, Claude, for the software industry the risk felt all too real.
Many of these firms’ business models essentially depend on extracting rich operating margins from databases they have created over the years. The fact that AI can now generate these quickly and easily, and gives clients AI tools to create these databases themselves, at a lower cost and in a more bespoke manner, leaves the likes of Thomson Reuters TRI, RELX and Wolters Kluwer looking increasingly vulnerable.
But the fear doesn’t start and end with these names. If Anthropic can release a legal plug-in that sent shockwaves through the industry, there are other software/services areas that can be shaken
| Name | Ticker | Star Rating | Economic Moat | YTD Return (%) |
|:---|:---|:---:|:---:|:---:|
| Oracle | ORCL | QQQQ | Wide | −19.11 |
| Workday | WDAY | QQQQQ | Wide | −32.70 |
| Zscaler | ZS | QQQQQ | Narrow | −23.97 |
| Datadog | DDOG | QQQQ | Wide | −6.37 |
| Adyen | ADYEN | QQQQ | Wide | −15.91 |
| Salesforce | CRM | QQQQQ | Wide | −30.16 |
| RELX | REL | QQQQQ | Wide | −33.34 |
| Thomson Reuters | TRI | QQQQQ | Wide | −32.37 |
| Wolters Kluwer | WKL | QQQQQ | Wide | −29.43 |
| SAP | SAP | QQQQQ | Wide | −18.89 |
Many of these firms’ business models essentially depend on extracting rich operating margins from databases they have created over the years. The fact that AI can now generate these quickly and easily, and gives clients AI tools to create these databases themselves, at a lower cost and in a more bespoke manner, leaves the likes of Thomson Reuters TRI, RELX and Wolters Kluwer looking increasingly vulnerable.
But the fear doesn’t start and end with these names. If Anthropic can release a legal plug-in that sent shockwaves through the industry, there are other software/services areas that can be shaken
**Which Software Firms Are Being Disrupted?**
There is, as yet, very little evidence to suggest that AI disruption has already occurred in the sector.
Revenue growth for firms definitely slowed in 2025 and many investors are taking this as confirmation that AI has already disrupted the industry, which induced a selloff and subsequent underperformance of the sector, particularly in Europe where most of our tech names are in the software space.
However, slower sales tell us one thing only—that these firms are selling less, which they blamed on clients delaying purchases. There could be many reasons for this, such as trying to do more with less, or because clients are taking a wait-and-see approach; on the off chance that AI does come through with the goods.
The fears also don’t bear out for many firms in terms of earnings. Thomson Reuters, reporting Q4 numbers on Feb. 5 said it is expecting organic revenue growth of around 8% in 2026, alongside operating margin improvement of 100 basis points. Similarly, Microsoft saw revenue up 15% year over year in the fourth quarter, while SAP SAP saw cloud backlog growing at more than 20%, with total revenue up 10%.
That’s not to say there’s nothing negative happening out there. US listed Gartner IT, a consulting firm that provides a variety of services, saw its stock fall by 30% on Feb. 3. It beat Q4 revenue and earnings estimates, but the company forecast zero growth in 2026, on the back of a “much tougher selling environment.”
From everything we’ve seen so far, particularly from service firms, retention rates are as high as ever, meaning clients have not shifted purchases elsewhere or stopped purchasing entirely, they’ve simply slowed their buying.
Why Hyperscalers Have Economic Moats
In the face of existential fears for stocks and sectors, it’s important to step back and assess how well these areas are protected by competitive advantages, and if they can deal with any challenges thrown at them.
Dealing with the hyperscalers first, almost all stocks here are designated wide moat by our analysts. This means Morningstar analysts believe these companies can generate outsize returns for at least 20 years into the future, which is a very high bar.
Stocks like this wouldn’t achieve this rating unless these analysts were confident about the robustness of their business models, even in a fast-changing business environment.
There are many different justifications for these wide moat ratings, including intangible assets, switching costs, and the network effect. There are also factors which could be augmented by further investment in AI. In the case of Meta Platforms, Morningstar analysis points to improved returns from its ad tech business and a way to put distance between itself and competitors, with the right investment.
However, there are risks. The lack of a clear monetization strategy around some of the recently announced capex investment is a concern for us, as well as the market. The caveat here being that recent falls have created a greater margin of safety for investors looking to get exposure to the AI theme.
**Switching Costs Are Key to Economic Moats**
Most of the software/services names companies we cover in this space also command wide moat ratings. For these companies, switching costs is a very common theme. There is a reason client retention rates are so high for many of these companies:
\- In many instances there are few other options for clients who need the data/services they provide.
It can take significant training for staff at client firms to get up to speed with their systems.
\- Switching to another provider or indeed building tools in-house can come at an enormous cost and effort, if it is even possible.
This isn’t to say that AI won’t disrupt some business models. Investors are right to be cautious. The applications of “vibe coding”, an AI-assisted software development approach, will likely be felt by many firms and products in the sector. We just don’t believe that the market selloff that has hit the entire sector. Many firms we cover are sufficiently protected from the worst of the effects.
RELX and Thomson Reuters, which have large legal businesses, are good examples as their shares have taken a big hit recently. Their businesses center on legal research, areas that rely on databases that have taken decades to build and depend on public and privately held information, much of which needs to be paid to access.
|Name|Ticker|Star Rating|Economic Moat|YTD Return (%)|
|:-|:-|:-|:-|:-|
|Microsoft|MSFT|QQQQQ|Wide|−16.39|
|Amazon|AMZN|QQQQ|Wide|−11.58|
|Meta|META|QQQQ|Wide| |
**Opportunities in the Tech Sector**
We see opportunity in the tech space as too good to ignore. In Europe tech is now one of the cheapest sectors in the region, trading at an aggregate 6% discount to our fair value estimate, in a fairly valued market.
We believe the majority of the Mag 7 stocks are attractive currently, particularly the ones related to the AI theme. Among the hyperscalers, Meta, Microsoft, Amazon, are all either 4 or 5- star stocks, meaning they are very attractive right now.
In the software space the opportunities are even more plentiful. We see attractive stocks on both sides of the Atlantic, in the form of SAP, RELX and Adyen in Europe, and Thomson Reuters, Salesforce and Workday in the US.
sentiment 1.00
10 hr ago • u/iShitBloodandCumShit • r/wallstreetbets • what_are_your_moves_tomorrow_february_13_2026 • C
Mines mostly wrapped up in futures. Closed out a massive silver short when it dumped for a greasy amount of cash and threw it into CRM. Buying the dips and selling the rips. Probably going to hold til earnings tho and sell some CCs as insurance. If earnings is great(I expect it will be) I’ll have 25k shares at 180ish and I’ll ride it up to 400 😂
sentiment 0.34
10 hr ago • u/Portfoliana • r/ValueInvesting • ai_panic_is_a_gift_to_value_investors • C
This is the best post I’ve read on here in weeks. Everyone is running around screaming about AI killing everything while the actual businesses behind these stocks are printing money like never before. CRM, ADBE, GOOG - these companies aren’t going anywhere, they’re literaly integrating AI into their own products and becoming MORE valuable not less. The panic is 100% retail driven and you can actually see it in real time if you track the Reddit sentiment - fear mentions are trough the roof right now which historically has been the best time to buy. Buffett didn’t get rich by panic selling, he got rich by buying when everyone else was terrified.
sentiment 0.77
11 hr ago • u/iShitBloodandCumShit • r/wallstreetbets • what_are_your_moves_tomorrow_february_13_2026 • C
Did that flipping CRM 😂
sentiment 0.39
11 hr ago • u/Antaxas • r/ValueInvesting • off_topic_the_market_will_recover_when_buffett • C
Buffet doesnt buy the market, he buys companies.
SaaS sector was hit really hard (40 to 70% drawdown within past 3-8 months). Look at tickers like CSU, RELX, TRI, TEAM, CRM, MSFT, NOW. These are now potential candidates for buffet.
Why didn't the market drop then, one might ask. Well.... There was a hefty rotation into metals and customer staples like Walmart, Costco, Coca Cola etc. These are now, historically seen, a bit bubbly.
If money doesnt leave the stock market, but its rotated between companies, you won't see a drawdown like on liberation day. Its happening behind the scenes within the market.
sentiment 0.74
14 hr ago • u/bulletinyoursocks • r/ValueInvesting • ai_panic_is_a_gift_to_value_investors • C
Exactly, they are literally selling off SPGI in the same way they have been dropping CRM. It's just a coordinated rotation driven by assumptions analysts can't fully understand. Just like they did not understand Google 1 year ago.
sentiment 0.41
17 hr ago • u/Bilbo_Butthole • r/ValueInvesting • ai_panic_is_a_gift_to_value_investors • C
CRM, RDDT, HOOD, NOW, AMZN, MSFT. Tickers I’ve been adding towards
sentiment 0.00
18 hr ago • u/12pKlepto • r/stocks • the_market_paradox_ai_software • Crystal Ball Post • B
**Why Everything Is Selling Off?!**
This is a question I see everywhere. People come up with some truly... unique reasons why. The most confounding feature of the current market environment is the simultaneous selloff in both AI infrastructure/hyperscaler stocks and the software/financial stocks that AI threatens to disrupt. The iShares Software ETF ($IGV) is down 24.6% YTD while NVDA has dropped 9-13% from recent highs. Salesforce ($CRM) has lost 40% over the past year. Even Nebius ($NBIS) reported earnings and saw immediate selling pressure. The market is pricing in two mutually exclusive narratives at the same time and I believe both are wrong.

**Software Armageddon Narrative**
Largely triggered by Anthropic's Claude Cowork release, a wave of selling hit software stocks across the board. The thesis: AI agents can now automate legal work, document analysis, coding, and enterprise workflows. This will eliminate the need for thousands of $10k+ SaaS licenses. Salesforce has become a bit of a posterchild for this, but names like ServiceNow ($NOW) are right beside it. Personally, I think the disruption risk to software margins is real, but the magnitude of the selloff far exceeds any reasonable downside scenario. Enterprise software transitions take years, not weeks, and the companies being sold are the same ones deploying AI the most aggressively.
**AI Stocks are Also Selling Off?!**
Here is the paradox. if AI is powerful enough to disrupt every industry, why are the companies building AI infra also declining? Three factors explain this:
1. The DeepSeek effect: essentially, frontier-capable models can be trained for a fraction of the prior costs. If cheaper models emerge, the foundation of the $602bn CapEx thesis [https://www.cnbc.com/2026/02/12/top-hyperscalers-to-boost-ai-capex-to-600-billion-stocks-that-benefit.html](https://www.cnbc.com/2026/02/12/top-hyperscalers-to-boost-ai-capex-to-600-billion-stocks-that-benefit.html) weakens.
2. 2026 has really become a "show me" year so far. It seems that investors now demand proof that the CapEx is generating returns.
3. Simple multiple compression: Semis are transitioning from "AI growth story" pricing to "prove fundamentals" pricing, a natural de-rating that occurs in every technology cycle.
**My Take:**
The market is making a classic category error in that its treating a rotation as a destruction event. The "AI Paradox" where we simultaneously price in software disruption AND infrastructure overbuilding is internally contradictory. If AI is powerful enough to destroy software businesses, then the demand for AI compute is by definition enormous and validates the CapEx spending. If the CapEx thesis is wrong, then AI is not powerful enough to threaten software incumbents. Both CANNOT BE TRUE simultaneously.
AI infrastructure demand is structural (validated across several recent earnings) but the market is repricing the TIMELINE. The market is demanding near-term proof of returns rather than paying for long-term potential. This is healthy. This is not destructive. The opportunity lies in owning the names where demand is most visable and valuations are most compressed.
sentiment -0.98
20 hr ago • u/InflationConstant228 • r/options • options_questions_safe_haven_periodic_megathread • C
I noticed enormous volume of deep in the money puts traded for CRM (closing price of $185 today) expiring 2/20. There are 6 lots of puts over 10,000 with strike price between $220 and $260 with premium ranging between $50 million and $100 million. Can anyone help me understand the strategy behind this?
sentiment -0.42
22 hr ago • u/Available-Range-5341 • r/ValueInvesting • irrational_sell_off • C
What do you consider "value." I started at the pits of the GFC coincidentally. I was in utilities and consumer staples and industrials for most of the past but they're insanely priced. Like, Wall St. HATES CLX and CL and they've been crashing forever but the narrative will shift back because the hate was based on actual information, not vibes (like this AI crash narrative)
I consider MSFT to be "value" now. It always snaps up/down to a PE of 30. Also got CRM and ADP. Never thought I'd buy CRM and ADP outside of a recession. Crazy times
sentiment -0.96
23 hr ago • u/Portfoliana • r/ValueInvesting • opinions_on_my_picks • C
Solid picks overall, I really like the GOOG and CRM positions. One thing I’d say tho - you have a LOT of positions for what I assume isn’t a massive portfolio? At some point your basically just building your own ETF with extra steps lol. I’d maybe consolidate a bit and go heavier on your highest conviction plays. Also nice to see someone mention ENPH, the sentment around solar has been super negative lately which usually means its a good time to look.
sentiment 0.92
24 hr ago • u/becuziwasinverted • r/stockstobuytoday • dips_to_buy • C
Long $MSFT $CRM $IVG (ETF)
sentiment 0.00


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