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Financeenterprise SaaSCRMServiceNow

CRM vs NOW vs WDAY: Three SaaS Bets, Three Rate Risks

ServiceNow closed April 30 at $88.31, down 58% from its post-split high of $211.48. Workday closed at $122.40, off 56% from $276. Salesforce got off comparatively easy at $176.53, down only 40% from its $296 peak. The three together have shed roughly $200 billion of market value in fifteen months while every single one of them grew revenue, raised guidance, and printed record cash flow. The market is not stupid. It is pricing two real risks at once. The 8-4 FOMC hold on April 29 — the most divided FOMC vote since 1992 — kept the federal funds rate at 3.64% with the 10-year Treasury at 4.42% and Core PCE Q/Q SAAR re-accelerating to 4.3% in the BEA's April 30 advance estimate. That is a duration-unfriendly rate regime. On top of that, generative AI threatens to reprice the per-seat licensing model that built every one of these companies. Both threats are real. Neither is fatal. The useful question is not which of these stocks is cheapest. It is which one is positioned to survive a stagflation-lite macro and an AI-capex arms race at the same time. By that test, the three are not interchangeable. Salesforce is generating $800 million in Agentforce ARR (up 169% year over year) at a 22.6 P/E. ServiceNow is selling AI workflow automation at a 52.6 P/E with 22% subscription growth and the deepest moat. Workday is the cheapest growth story but spends 27% of revenue on R&D into a market — back-office HR — that AI agents may genuinely commoditize. Three different stocks. Three different rate-regime risks. Three different bets.

May 1, 2026Read More