3 Beaten-Down Software Stocks: 2 to Avoid and 1 to Buy
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3 Beaten-Down Software Stocks: 2 to Avoid and 1 to Buy
March 30, 2026 — 10:20 pm EDT
Written by
Daniel Sparks for
The Motley Fool->
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Key Points
- ServiceNow boasts the fastest-growing revenue out of these three, but its stock's premium multiple demands near-perfection from here.
- Salesforce's top-line growth rate is the lowest of the three businesses.
- Trading at just 14 times earnings, Adobe stock is by far the cheapest of the three. But is it the most attractive?
- 10 stocks we like better than Adobe ›
Shares of software companies have taken a beating in 2026 as investors reassess valuations and the potential risks introduced by artificial intelligence (AI). Three software stocks worth calling out are industry leaders ServiceNow (NYSE: NOW), Salesforce (NYSE: CRM), and Adobe (NASDAQ: ADBE). All three have seen their stocks slide sharply year to date.
But a cheaper stock isn't always an attractive one. For investors looking to buy the dip, it is critical to separate underlying business momentum from what the market still demands in valuation.
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Case in point: When comparing these three software giants side by side, only one arguably looks like a clear buy, even though all three have taken a beating.
Image source: Getty Images.
ServiceNow: Strong growth, no margin of safety
As far as business growth goes, ServiceNow is crushing it.
In its fourth quarter of 2025, the workflow automation company's subscription revenue climbed 21% year over year to $3.47 billion.
And demand trends are impressive, too. ServiceNow's current remaining performance obligations (cRPO) -- a metric representing contracted revenue expected to be recognized over the next 12 months -- surged 25% year over year to $12.85 billion during the quarter.
But the problem for prospective buyers is the price tag. Even after the recent software sell-off, ServiceNow trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of about 63 as of this writing. And its forward price-to-earnings ratio, which looks at a stock's valuation as a multiple of analysts' consensus earnings per share forecast for the next 12 months, is lower but still robust at about 26.
At this valuation, the market is arguably pricing continued top-line growth at similar rates for years to come. Any slight deceleration in the company's growth could lead to a severe rerating of the stock.
Salesforce: A cooling core business
Meanwhile, Salesforce continues to grow its revenue at a notable but meaningfully slower rate than ServiceNow's.
In fiscal 2026 (the 12-month period that ended on Jan. 31, 2026), the customer relationship management platform specialist's total revenue increased 10% year over year to $41.5 billion.
To be fair, the company is aggressively pushing its Data 360 platform and Agentforce AI offerings, which recently helped drive $2.9 billion in fourth-quarter recurring revenue. But these AI initiatives are attempting to reinvigorate a core business that has definitively cooled compared to its meaningfully higher growth rates several years ago.
With a price-to-earnings ratio of about 24, Salesforce's valuation is much more grounded than ServiceNow's premium multiple. But given its slower growth profile, the stock still does not look like a clear buy.
Adobe: The clear winner
That leaves Adobe. The creative software giant's stock has had a brutal start to the year, with shares plummeting about 31% year to date as of this writing.
But Adobe is still delivering solid double-digit growth -- especially in the context of the stock's cheap valuation. In its first quarter of fiscal 2026 (a period that ended on Feb. 27, 2026), Adobe's total revenue rose 12% year over year to $6.4 billion.
Further, Adobe remains a cash-generating machine. The company's trailing-12-month free cash flow came in at $10.3 billion. Measured against its market capitalization of about $98 billion as of this writing, this is a substantial sum.
This strong fundamental performance arguably makes the stock's recent slide look like an overreaction. As of this writing, Adobe trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of just 14. This is a staggering discount for a company with Adobe's historical track record and high operating margins.
A calculated bet
Of course, there is a reason Adobe's multiple has compressed so sharply. The market is increasingly worried about how generative AI could disrupt creative workflows and lower the barrier to entry for emerging