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CRM
Salesforce, Inc.
stock NYSE

At Close
Feb 6, 2026 3:59:58 PM EST
191.36USD+0.732%(+1.39)13,627,173
181.73Bid   198.33Ask   16.60Spread
Pre-market
Feb 6, 2026 9:27:30 AM EST
193.21USD+1.706%(+3.24)43,811
After-hours
Feb 6, 2026 4:55:30 PM EST
191.09USD-0.143%(-0.27)55,421
OverviewOption ChainMax PainOptionsPrice & VolumeSplitsDividendsHistoricalExchange VolumeDark Pool LevelsDark Pool PrintsExchangesShort VolumeShort Interest - DailyShort InterestBorrow Fee (CTB)Failure to Deliver (FTD)ShortsTrendsNewsTrends
CRM Reddit Mentions
Subreddits
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We have sentiment values and mention counts going back to 2017. The complete data set is available via the API.
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CRM Specific Mentions
As of Feb 6, 2026 6:23:18 PM EST (5 minutes ago)
Includes all comments and posts. Mentions per user per ticker capped at one per hour.
34 min ago • u/DrDoomslayer • r/wallstreetbets • down_59k_in_2026_its_been_a_rough_year_so_far • C
msft is a winning horse, not going anywhere, u gona bag hold them but i promise ull make ur 4k vack and then some, actually the MSFT position alone will cancel CRM/LULU losses, trust, nancy is long on MSFT and so is every retirement 401k, look into what all of them hold, MSFT.
sentiment 0.62
52 min ago • u/MarketRodeo • r/DeepFuckingValue • top_stocks_hitting_52week_highslows_february_6 • News 🗞 • B
## 📈 52-Week Highs:
The 52-Week Highs list shows stocks that have reached their highest price point in the past 52 weeks during the trading session.
| Symbol | Name | Price | Year High | Market Cap |
|:-------|:-----|:-----:|:---------:|:----------:|
| [XOM](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/XOM) | Exxon Mobil Corporation | $149.02 | $149.57 | $628.4B |
| [JNJ](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/JNJ) | Johnson & Johnson | $239.99 | $240.94 | $578.2B |
| [KO](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/KO) | The Coca-Cola Company | $79.03 | $79.19 | $340.1B |
| [CSCO](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/CSCO) | Cisco Systems, Inc. | $84.82 | $84.95 | $335.1B |
| [MRK](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/MRK) | Merck & Co., Inc. | $121.93 | $122.66 | $304.6B |
## 📉 52-Week Lows:
The 52-Week Lows list shows stocks that have reached their lowest price point in the past 52 weeks during the trading session.
| Symbol | Name | Price | Year Low | Market Cap |
|:-------|:-----|:-----:|:--------:|:----------:|
| [CRM](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/CRM) | Salesforce, Inc. | $191.35 | $187.12 | $182.2B |
| [ADP](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/ADP) | Automatic Data Processing, Inc. | $231.36 | $230.28 | $93.6B |
| [CCI](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/CCI) | Crown Castle Inc. | $80.88 | $77.01 | $35.2B |
| [AXON](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/AXON) | Axon Enterprise, Inc. | $414.20 | $396.41 | $32.7B |
| [VEEV](https://marketrodeo.com/asset/VEEV) | Veeva Systems Inc. | $183.65 | $178.04 | $30.2B |
**Source:** [52-Week Highs-Lows](https://marketrodeo.com/market-movers?tab=highs-lows)
sentiment -0.67
1 hr ago • u/MoneyComes_MoneyGoes • r/stocks • rddt_undervalued • C
agree w. impossible on this, you're looking at this wrong. Even if you just extrapolate out their Q4 earnings that they just reported and assume ZERO growth the PE is around 30...stock market is always forward looking, stocks don't get credit for what they've accomplished in the past - just look at the software stocks for example NOW, CRM, MSFT.
sentiment 0.29
2 hr ago • u/iShitBloodandCumShit • r/wallstreetbets • weekend_discussion_thread_for_the_weekend_of • C
CRM calls made me creammmmmm
sentiment 0.36
3 hr ago • u/xiaodown • r/investing • this_makes_no_sense_can_someone_smart_explain_this • C
That, I will concede.
However, I think if the big SAAS companies reduce workforces because they have the force multiplier of agentic coding, we're going to have a large number of unemployed software engineers, and I think some of them are going to probably start small businesses, some of which may compete with existing SAAS companies, but I think the vast majority will be small companies solving small problems that were previously overlooked because the effort to payoff was too disjointed.
With agentic coding, a couple of unemployed devs can get together and probably make a small product for a specific niche use case. Hell, maybe some of these will even be plugins for Salesforce or Hubspot or Atlassian or Workday whatever, and can be sold in their 3rd party app store / marketplace. But at any rate, I think that many of these new startup companies will also end up using the existing SAAS vendors that they're already familiar with.
Maybe this is cope. But I kind of see AI being a thing that actually solves new, smaller problems. I don't really think it's going to re-solve the big ones - the ones that have lead to these current SAAS monoliths.
I can tell you, when I worked at a software startup, the last thing we ever wanted to do was deal with was doing our own HR or handling our own CRM. We were too busy trying to build the damn product; we didn't have time to vibecode a replacement for Datadog or Shopify or Canva or Postman or Figma or whatever the hell we used for travel receipt reimbursements (Gusto maybe? I forget). Companies just don't have time to deal with that. Even though on a personal level I can tell you I absolutely abhor Adobe's subscription model, they're here to stay, and from a business perspective, if you care about your designs and listen to your design team, and they tell you they need creative cloud, you just do it. You don't tell them to vibecode an Illustrator replacement. It doesn't make financial sense.
sentiment -0.95
3 hr ago • u/Longjumping_Rip_1475 • r/stocks • rstocks_daily_discussion_fundamentals_friday_feb • C
I will probably get flak for this but I think TEAM, CRM, NOW, ZM will not do well with AI
sentiment -0.30
4 hr ago • u/ablationator22 • r/ValueInvesting • bsx_worth_picking_up • C
Investors expected continued growth at 2025 rates but that’s unrealistic. 2025 was a quick transition of existing RF to PFA. at this point PFA conversion is mostly done and most RF holdouts have converted.
Competitors who are more established are coming out with their products slowly so some clawback was inevitable. But Boston was smart and has solidified their position with aggressive deals across watchman and CRM, along with first mover advantage, and the fact that their system is very fast and requires minimal mapping making it perfect for the upcoming ASC expansion—I think they are exactly where they want to be. The entire market is going to continue to grow very quickly
sentiment 0.91
7 hr ago • u/jsands7 • r/WallStreetbetsELITE • can_someone_pls_explain_why_stocks_are_green_today • C
Contacts are real things.
My company 3 years into multi-multi-multimillion dollar contracts with Salesforce and Service Now. We just finally got all of the computer systems fully converted over to them, and now we’re actually paying them MORE to customize the programs and provide ongoing support. It took 3 years to get this far along with them… we’re never going back to our old legacy systems and it will be decades before we look into using a different CRM provider or back-end cloud/systems support company.
Like a week ago the US Army awarded Salesforce a $5,600,000,000 contract (that’s Billion with a B).
These companies are just suddenly dead lol.
sentiment 0.80
8 hr ago • u/Rich-Badger-7601 • r/wallstreetbets • daily_discussion_thread_for_february_06_2026 • C
AMZN should roll their cap ex budget into instead propping up the share price of CRM because these bags are getting heavier by the day
sentiment 0.35
9 hr ago • u/bkbruiser • r/investing • the_great_bear_trap_of_2026 • C
Switching from the User model to Consumption model would limit the cannibalism of revenue.
I do agree, there are many portions of the stack that can be limited or replaced by a future version of Agentforce . As mentioned, it's not at that level yet, but, as data is getting cleansed at companies the results are getting better.
The metric to watch is net new customer adoption. If that trends downward fast then the death of SaaS is real.
CRM being a very high cost product will be the target of new and ambitious CIOs coming into organizations with CRM that are looking to cut costs with AI.
sentiment 0.08
10 hr ago • u/CapCityPhotos • r/ValueInvesting • msft_amzn_amd_is_time_to_buy_now • C
There are some phenomenal deals out there in the market right now if you can stomach the volatility. PYPL, ADBE, CRM, UNH, MU, AMD, TSM, ORCL, INTU, NOW, MRVL, AVGO.
The price you're paying for future cashflows should be attractive to value investors. Some of them are low growth, but amazing FCF (like PYPL) and some are high growth and amazing future cash flows (like AVGO).
Of course, none of know what the future holds, and much of the fear is that many of the software companies will slowly be wiped out by AI.
MSFT, AMZN, GOOG are the best companies out of anything I mentioned by far. However their valuation comes with a premium over the options I listed as well. I think they're fairly valued currently.
sentiment 0.99
10 hr ago • u/SuperLeverage • r/stocks • dan_ives_i_think_software_rips_higher_from_here • C
At the end of the day, most businesses will want to focus on their core business. Every time you step away from your core business that is a risk. If something goes wrong, with an ERP or CRM you decided to do in house, which is not your core business takes you away from why you exist. Even if they could save a few bucks doing some of this stuff in house - is that really where you want managers at Costco, Chipotle, Tyre companies, civil engineering etc etc to all focus on? Vibe code your own CRM and ERP then build up a team of staff good enough to manage and run it so when something doesn’t work they won’t just say, “we have no idea, it was all done by AI, so no one really knows how it works or what’s wrong”
sentiment -0.20
11 hr ago • u/michael_curdt • r/stocks • is_the_ai_bubble_bursting • C
SaaS revenue model is primarily “per seat”. AI automation is threatening it. If an AI agent can write code, run workflows, update CRM, generate dashboards, reconcile accounting etc - end user companies will need fewer seats from SaaS providers although not fewer tools. SaaS is simply an AI distributor. AI doesn’t need SaaS to survive. AI is going to feast on all the lost revenue from SaaS companies (in addition to dozens of other applications outside of SaaS). That is, revenue is shifting from SaaS to AI-first companies.
SaaS companies are also building AI features and investing in AI - but they are just features and is not changing the pricing model. Some small % of SaaS companies figured out ways to charge additional $ for AI tiers (new revenue stream), but that’s not most. It feels like SaaS is turning to AI to survive which is what investors are pricing in.
This is super bullish on AI and bearish on SaaS - but I am not one of those who thinks AI can magically replace all SaaS companies out there.
If it matters, I am a software engineer veteran who runs a SaaS company for a living.
sentiment 0.87
13 hr ago • u/Portfoliana • r/stocks • if_this_isnt_a_dotcom_level_event_then_now_is • C
The key distinction I'd make is between software companies with actual recurring revenue and solid unit economics vs. pure AI speculation plays. MSFT and CRM have predictable subscription streams that don't evaporate overnight - their customers are locked into ecosystems. When fear drives these down alongside unprofitable tech, that's often where the opportunity is.
What I find interesting is the PE compression on established names. MSFT trading at 28x forward earnings while growing revenue 15%+ isn't the same risk profile as buying Pets.com in 2000. The difference is cash flow. If you're going to be greedy when others are fearful, at least be greedy on companies generating actual profits.
sentiment 0.31
14 hr ago • u/Due-University8711 • r/ValueInvesting • what_price_point_are_you_accumulating_msft • C
From a chart-first lens, MSFT is the only one I’m actively watching here. I don’t try to nail exact bottoms — I care about structure + reclaim. Accumulation makes sense near prior demand / VWAP zones, with adds only after holding higher lows and volume confirming.
ADBE / CRM still look like range trades — weak relative strength vs SPX and no clean trend resumption yet. I’d need to see base completion + breakout attempts before sizing.
FIG is a different beast — liquidity and trend consistency aren’t there for me in this tape.
TL;DR: MSFT on pullbacks into support with confirmation. The rest are watchlist names until the charts prove it.
sentiment 0.75
14 hr ago • u/RevolutionaryGate742 • r/investing • this_makes_no_sense_can_someone_smart_explain_this • C
Here is an economics/ finance perspective:
You're not wrong that it looks contradictory, but there are a few structural things going on that explain it.
**Most of these stocks were just expensive.** When people say a stock is "expensive" they don't mean the share price is high, they mean the price relative to what the company actually earns is stretched. That's measured by the P/E ratio (price to earnings). A lot of these names were trading at 30x, 40x, even 60x+ earnings. That means investors were paying $40-60 for every $1 of profit, betting that growth would eventually justify that price. When confidence wobbles even slightly, the market re-rates them. The company can be doing fine, but the market decides it's no longer willing to pay 40x and marks it down to 25x. That alone can be a 30-40% drop with zero change in fundamentals. That's called multiple compression, and it's what's hitting both groups right now.
**Interest rates make this worse.** Growth stocks are valued on future earnings. When interest rates are higher, those future earnings are worth less today in present value terms. So the maths behind the valuation literally changes even if the business doesn't. This hits high-P/E tech disproportionately hard regardless of whether the company is an AI builder or an AI "victim."
**Passive investing amplifies everything.** A huge amount of money now sits in index funds. These funds buy and sell based on market cap weighting, not fundamentals. That means the biggest tech names get bought simply for being big, and when sentiment turns, they get sold for the same reason. It doesn't matter that NOW and NVDA are completely different businesses — they're in the same indices, held by the same funds, and sell together when money flows out.
I**n sell-offs, correlations breakdown**. This is a well-known pattern. When investors de-risk, they sell what's liquid and what's gone up the most. During risk-off periods, correlations across stocks spike toward 1. Fundamentally unrelated companies drop together because it's the same money exiting, not because the market has a coherent view on each individual company.
So in your example.
The incumbents like NOW, ADBE, CRM aren't getting wiped out. They're getting repriced. There's real competition from AI-native tools, margins might compress, growth might slow, but these are massive businesses with deep customer lock-in and switching costs. A price correction is not the same as going bust.
The AI infrastructure companies aren't a bubble in the dot-com sense either. The spend is real, the revenue is real, and the demand for compute isn't slowing. Think of them less like speculative bets and more like electricity providers: everyone needs the infrastructure, and these companies are building the plumbing. Many of them are also diversified businesses (GOOG and META aren't pure AI plays, they have enormous ad businesses generating cash regardless).
Both can drop at the same time because the market isn't making a coherent argument. It's a bunch of different actors repricing risk, unwinding crowded positions, and adjusting to rates, all at once. The contradiction you're seeing is the market being a market, not the market being right about two opposite things.
sentiment 0.94
14 hr ago • u/CryptoBoy-007 • r/ValueInvesting • what_price_point_are_you_accumulating_msft • C
MSFT for sure and these levels are great for me. CRM has a great entry point as well. Not interested in Adobe.
sentiment 0.88
15 hr ago • u/xiaodown • r/investing • this_makes_no_sense_can_someone_smart_explain_this • C
Ok, so, I'm going to let you in on some insider info: We've always had the ability to do that.
It's called hiring software developer contractors from the global south and paying them $1.50/hr with no bathroom breaks.
Do you know why we don't do that exclusively now? Because the quality of code they put out isn't very good (though, I would argue, it's better than the quality you get out of Claude Code). But big software companies have always had an easy and cheap "force multiplier" at their disposal.
If you want to found a startup and make a competitor for one of the major SAAS companies right now, and your plan is to hire a small workforce and tell everyone to use agentic plugins in their IDEs, you can do that. But you're going to run into a brick wall very quickly.
The AI might know how to write javascript and CSS, but it doesn't know how to architect a scalable system. It doesn't know about data residency requirements, multi-region deployments, GDPR or SOC2 or PCI compliance. It doesn't know about load testing and security and FedRAMP. It doesn't know about efficient schema design and materialized views and pipelining. It doesn't know about deployment trains and monitoring / observability tools.
And then after you write your Salesforce Killer, you're going to have to host it, but as a startup, you're going to be paying a LOT more to AWS than the big SAAS companies are. A company spending eight figures a month at Daddy Bezos' Cloud Emporium is going to be able to negotiate a significant discount, but Barbara's CRM Solutions Inc isn't.
And even if you figure all that out, you're going to be left with a product full of mediocre code and a company full of engineers who don't understand the code they're writing.
Oh, and here's some more inside baseball: We (people who work in software at big, publicly traded tech companies headquartered in Silicon Valley) are all already using AI. Through my employer, I have a github account with unlimited copilot - any agent, including claude. I am actually encouraged to use AI to help code (it is pretty good at writing unit tests, I'll grant). But, saying that agentic coding is a force multiplier, and then only allowing for applying that to plucky startups that are seeking to dethrone Salesforce is crazy - Salesforce is already using AI as a force multiplier. At best, the plucky startup is moving at the same velocity. They're not faster. And they're only cheaper because they lack feature parity.
I swear, all of this "Companies that don't realize AI changes everything have already lost" sounds ... eerily familiar. It almost sounds like "Companies that don't realize the metaverse changes everything have already lost". Or "Companies that don't realize blockchain changes everything have already lost."
sentiment 0.93
15 hr ago • u/Velvet_Minotaur • r/wallstreetbets • what_stocks_do_you_think_are_at_a_discount_and_a • C
You’re jumping multiple steps ahead. The next stage is that AI is going to be built into the SaaS layer. Legacy industries—hospitals, logistics, banking, energy, construction, universities, manufacturing—aren’t going to develop their own homegrown versions of Workday for HR, Salesforce for CRM, Microsoft Teams for collaboration, Zoom for conferencing, Oracle for data management, etc. Even with AI, they severely lack the capabilities, staff, and confidence to bring any of those services in-house.
sentiment 0.03
15 hr ago • u/Econmajorhere • r/stocks • if_this_isnt_a_dotcom_level_event_then_now_is • C
I refuse to believe humans of the future would be paying Marc Benioff massive sums to access a dogshit CRM that’s impossible to transition off of, just because a busty early-20s girl sold it to them while they were going through a divorce.
sentiment -0.30


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