Did Jensen Huang give the green light to buy software stocks?

With valuations where they are, itâs either an amazing time to buy software stocks or a terrible one. And in an interview last week, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang gave his view.
According to Huang, falling software share prices are âthe most illogical thing in the worldâ. So is this a once-in-a-generation buying opportunity for investors?
Tools
Software stocks have been falling sharply over the last year. One example is Adobe, which is down 40% in the last 12 months.
The concern is that artificial intelligence (AI) is going to disrupt the business. But at an AI conference last week, Huang said:
âThereâs this notion that the tool in the software industry is in decline, and will be replaced by AI. It is the most illogical thing in the world, and time will prove itself. If you were a human or a robot⦠would you use tools or reinvent tools? The answer, obviously, is to use tools.â
That sounds encouraging, but Iâm unconvinced this gets at why software stocks have been selling off. The concern isnât that theyâre going away â itâs that theyâre getting disrupted.
Whatâs the risk?
In Huangâs terms, the danger for companies like Salesforce (NYSE:CRM) isnât that AI replaces screwdrivers. Itâs that it uses the existing ones in a way that makes them much less valuable.
At the moment, humans need a user interface (UI) to manage customer relationships. But an AI agent doesnât and thatâs the problem the company’s currently trying to figure out.
If a customer uses a Claude plugin to automate tasks like logging calls or entering data, it doesnât need a human. And that means it doesnât need a UI, which is what drives Salesforceâs revenues.
That doesnât reduce the firmâs value to zero â the need for a database wonât go away. But if AI agents can use the existing back-end tools better than humans, thereâs a significant problem.
How big is the risk?
The more optimistic case for software companies is based on the idea that AI might help humans use tools, rather than do it better than them. And Alphabetâs Gemini is a good example of this.
Google’s managed the shift from online search to AI-based chatbots very well. Despite the rise of ChatGPT, the company’s moved quickly and launched its own products to compete.
In some cases, I think this is a plausible outcome for software companies. If they develop their own AI products, they might well be able to retain customers.
Salesforce has shifted to an outcome-based pricing model, rather than a subscription-based one. Thatâs not ideal, but investors will be hoping it can help the firm remain indispensable.
What to do?
In terms of the AI threat, my sense is that not all software companies are the same. But the stock market’s largely treating them as similar â and I think that creates opportunities.
The risk isnât that AI replaces tools, itâs that it uses the existing tools in ways that reduce the value of what the likes of Salesforce currently do. And thatâs more realistic in some cases than others.
As a result, Iâm looking at businesses that have more specialised products, ideally in regulated industries. This, I suspect, provides a level of protection that more general applications donât have.
The post Did Jensen Huang give the green light to buy software stocks? appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.
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Stephen Wright has no position in any of the shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has recommended Adobe, Alphabet, Nvidia, and Salesforce. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.
