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Salesforce (CRM) shares are in the midst of a historic collapse, dipping to a 52-week low of $146.32 yesterday, June 22, after falling for 14 consecutive trading sessions, the longest losing streak in the firm’s recorded history.
CRM has shed roughly 29% during this unprecedented streak and is now down 42% year-to-date. Since its all-time high of $368 set in December 2024, the stock has lost nearly 60% of its value.
The primary driver of this selloff is what market participants have termed the “SaaSpocalypse,” a growing fear that AI agents and coding tools could render traditional SaaS platforms obsolete.
Investors are concerned that enterprises might use artificial intelligence to build proprietary alternatives to Salesforce’s Agentforce platform, effectively cutting the company out of the workflow entirely.
This fear was amplified by Accenture’s near-20% single-day collapse the prior week, when the IT consulting giant explicitly cited artificial intelligence as “compressing demand” for traditional IT services.
Salesforce has attempted to address these concerns through aggressive M&A activity, announcing a $3.6 billion all-cash buyout of customer support AI firm “Fin” to bolster its Agentforce offering.
CRM has completed 15 deals since May 2025 and is also acquiring usage-based billing platforms like m3ter to monetize AI agent actions rather than traditional per-seat subscriptions.
This helped the company’s Agentforce platform grow 205% year-over-year to a record $1.2 billion in the latest reported quarter.
However, investors remain unconvinced, and the Fin acquisition has actually stoked further discontent over integration complexity and profitability concerns.
The broader sector rotation is also punishing CRM shares, as capital flows rather aggressively into semiconductor stocks while abandoning enterprise software names.
The iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV) has declined 19% this year, even as the Nasdaq-100 ($IUXX) actually climbed by an equivalent amount — showcasing a stark divergence between chip and software stocks.