Don't forget when it comes to things like this - if in this case IBM ever had an astoundingly good day, CNN would never write an article about it, and you'd never see it on HN. They choose the picture of reality to install in the reader's minds by selectively choosing what news to report on vs. what to ignore.
It's often interesting to see what the major US news orgs - right and left - are choosing to share with their readers. You see two completely different versions of reality.
With the caveat that I work for IBM but have no inside knowledge about anything important, it doesn't seem very bad to me? Overall profit is going to be down a tiny amount below expectations.
If I read that as an IBM investor I might fully exit. The new product flopped, growth was 1%, and the CEO sounds extremely unconfident. There are way better places to put your money given the potential for future earnings now looks incredibly weak.
Where would you put your money? Everything in the US seems to have exposure to the AI bubble. Is Europe sitting out of the AI race? Maybe some euro etf?
>In the last few weeks of June, we saw clients shift their quarterly capex spend toward servers, storage, and memory purchases to secure supply-constrained infrastructure ahead of expected price increases. This dynamic impacted client buying patterns. While we anticipated some supply chain related impact in our expectations, we did not anticipate the magnitude of the capex reprioritization. In addition, clients were distracted with rapidly-evolving, industry-wide cybersecurity concerns in the quarter.
Sure, but a prediction made 3 months ago turns out to be short by a few percent at most, and that leads to a 25%+ drop in the share price? That seems weird to me.
What if the market expected 25% more then reported ? Nobody "knows" what the market expects. People infer it by looking at forward valuation, company guidance, investor expectations, and many many other things happening in the world, in competition, in the value chain. And of course the market does its thing and figures that this company has x% chance of beating (or missing) by $y, and when it's wrong the moves can be huge.
IME you have to be true to what you predict. Whether you're predictably growing, predictably shrinking, or predictably flat if you blow your prediction that's when people start to worry that you don't know what you're doing.
Especially when the expectations are informed by the company’s own guidance about what to expect and they are wrong. It means they missed their own predictions which doesn’t engender confidence.
That battle was fought in 2012-2015 and except for a few exceptions, IBM lost. The only real advantage IBM had was in mainframes with 1-10TB RAM. For example, customers who like doing database joins on a time-slice of countrywide telecoms data. Only a few customers have that use case, unsurprisingly.
I remember they were pushing the AI narrative all along the 2010s on their front page. 10 years ahead of everybody.
We looked into it at the time there was nothing interesting.
Outside of the mainframe, power business, some research and cool things they bought like Redhat and Hashicorp, IBM is an horrible company.
They are the incarnation of the cold, stupid corporation, the buzzword soup and the sales to entrap you in an expensive unending nightmare.
I heard they had a lot of really good people but my guess is most of them left.
Depends what happens next. RSUs are taxed as ordinary income at their market value at the time they vest, so it's not necessarily bad if the stock is down.
In fact, the ideal scenario is that the price drops just before your vest and then bounces back up after.
If an employee periodically vests a fixed number of shares, as opposed to a fixed dollar amount of shares, this is actually untrue.
Assume an employee's marginal tax rate is 40% and their capital gains rate is 15%. Then there are 2 scenarios:
1. Vest 100 shares at $100 apiece. After tax that's 60 shares * $100 = $6000 total.
2. A sudden price drop causes 100 shares to vest at $50. After tax that's 60 shares * $50 = $3000. Later the price rises to $100 and the employee sells them. Another $3000 in capital gains, leaving $2550 after taxes. Total = $5250.
>2. A sudden price drop causes 100 shares to vest at $50. After tax that's 60 shares * $50 = $3000. [...]
This is only true if you "sell" 40 shares immediately at the time of vesting to pay the tax bill. Because you lose the 40 shares, you don't have as much shares to appreciate in the subsequent upswing. However if you prefer to settle your tax obligations in cash instead, you don't have this issue and you'd actually pay less taxes (assuming the upswing does materialize). It's risky though, because you're basically taking a long position on the stock, and if it falls even more, you'd lose even more money.
Paying taxes isn't optional. Sure you can invest more in the stock with external funds but that's not a fair proposition. If you were to tell me there's a certain chance of a stock going up by 100% we could also just buy calls with those magic funds and make far more money.
In the UK you pay income tax on the initial price; then if you hold the shares before selling capital gains tax on any gains. However CGT is a much lower rate than income tax so I guess it could be a bit advantageous. But you have to factor that against the risk of holding a single company's shares (also the company you work for), against selling and buying into the whole market.
its ironic that IBM sold off its x86 pc/server to Lenovo and kept their big iron (mainframe) but now everyone is buying up pc/server due to AI boom. Dell's stock have been surging with the rest of AI stocks
They just need to wait until nobody is selling or can buy new PCs and are forced to use outdated equipment to use as dumb terminals to access those mainframes.
I think it made sense on its own terms. They retrenched into the business where they are actually differentiated. It is notable that IBM net margins have been ~15% at best for decades. It's an odd business that is huge and just trucks along without remarkable growth. It is the butt of jokes but also a top 100 company by many measures.
Well, it's odd in that they do this sideways financial performance while also from time to time dropping a state-of-the-art microprocessor, like a real tech giant.
You could also see that it's odd in that most companies from 100 years ago simply don't exist. The perfectly flat trajectory bordering on fade-out is uncommon. The median 100-year-old tech company is Sperry, not IBM.
People will argue that it's not dead yet but they're barely top 100 in the world, when they used to be... Number one.
Ouch.
Now, people are going to argue again but IBM, in its dying breath in 2000, did something really amazing: they committed one billion dollar to finance the development of that little known thing in the world called...
Linux.
Maybe Linux would have been immensely successful even without that one billion dollar investment from IBM but I cannot help but see that move in 2000 as the ultimate revenge move against Microsoft.
IBM knew it was falling into irrelevancy, Microsoft had 95%+ browsers market share and the future looked grim. Apple was in bad shape, smartphones didn't exist yet. It looked like Microsoft would conquer everything else.
Turns out: Microsoft (sadly) mostly kept the desktop but, thankfully, it's Linux that conquered just about everything (and OS X / MacOS / iOS quite a bit too).
So big thanks to IBM for that move.
You can think what you want but to me this what a move to prevent Microsoft from owning the entire software world.
What does IBM even do? Something with India, and servicing legacy no-bid government pork contracts, as far as I can tell. That appears to be the focus and has been for a long time.
Don't forget when it comes to things like this - if in this case IBM ever had an astoundingly good day, CNN would never write an article about it, and you'd never see it on HN. They choose the picture of reality to install in the reader's minds by selectively choosing what news to report on vs. what to ignore.
It's often interesting to see what the major US news orgs - right and left - are choosing to share with their readers. You see two completely different versions of reality.
Are there significant left-leaning major news orgs in the US (genuine question) ?
Left-leaning and major? No. Considering the countries that the US is compared to, there's not really a centre-leading major news source, either.
CNN is pretty far left and kind of major.
Worst day, so far* ;-)
The press release: https://newsroom.ibm.com/2026-07-14-Arvind-Krishnas-Letter-t...
With the caveat that I work for IBM but have no inside knowledge about anything important, it doesn't seem very bad to me? Overall profit is going to be down a tiny amount below expectations.
If I read that as an IBM investor I might fully exit. The new product flopped, growth was 1%, and the CEO sounds extremely unconfident. There are way better places to put your money given the potential for future earnings now looks incredibly weak.
Where would you put your money? Everything in the US seems to have exposure to the AI bubble. Is Europe sitting out of the AI race? Maybe some euro etf?
COMEX is running lower on silver, their dumping is not sustainable. Could hit $500, $5000.
I'd like to know the answer as well. VTWO tracking the Russell 2000? At least you know it's an ETF that doesn't contain the big AI players.
US recession will spread to everything and everyone, including or especially EU.
>In the last few weeks of June, we saw clients shift their quarterly capex spend toward servers, storage, and memory purchases to secure supply-constrained infrastructure ahead of expected price increases. This dynamic impacted client buying patterns. While we anticipated some supply chain related impact in our expectations, we did not anticipate the magnitude of the capex reprioritization. In addition, clients were distracted with rapidly-evolving, industry-wide cybersecurity concerns in the quarter.
Well, the answer is in your question, it's all about expectations ; the market wanted more, didn't get it, and re-rates.
Sure, but a prediction made 3 months ago turns out to be short by a few percent at most, and that leads to a 25%+ drop in the share price? That seems weird to me.
What if the market expected 25% more then reported ? Nobody "knows" what the market expects. People infer it by looking at forward valuation, company guidance, investor expectations, and many many other things happening in the world, in competition, in the value chain. And of course the market does its thing and figures that this company has x% chance of beating (or missing) by $y, and when it's wrong the moves can be huge.
IME you have to be true to what you predict. Whether you're predictably growing, predictably shrinking, or predictably flat if you blow your prediction that's when people start to worry that you don't know what you're doing.
Especially when the expectations are informed by the company’s own guidance about what to expect and they are wrong. It means they missed their own predictions which doesn’t engender confidence.
IBM could've been Palantir x100.
they've the people, tech - only thing stopping them is myopic leadership.
That battle was fought in 2012-2015 and except for a few exceptions, IBM lost. The only real advantage IBM had was in mainframes with 1-10TB RAM. For example, customers who like doing database joins on a time-slice of countrywide telecoms data. Only a few customers have that use case, unsurprisingly.
I remember they were pushing the AI narrative all along the 2010s on their front page. 10 years ahead of everybody.
We looked into it at the time there was nothing interesting.
Outside of the mainframe, power business, some research and cool things they bought like Redhat and Hashicorp, IBM is an horrible company. They are the incarnation of the cold, stupid corporation, the buzzword soup and the sales to entrap you in an expensive unending nightmare.
I heard they had a lot of really good people but my guess is most of them left.
This was great timing for IBM employees with RSU's. Many folks had RSUs which literally unlocked this morning.
Great meaning bad?
Depends what happens next. RSUs are taxed as ordinary income at their market value at the time they vest, so it's not necessarily bad if the stock is down.
In fact, the ideal scenario is that the price drops just before your vest and then bounces back up after.
If an employee periodically vests a fixed number of shares, as opposed to a fixed dollar amount of shares, this is actually untrue.
Assume an employee's marginal tax rate is 40% and their capital gains rate is 15%. Then there are 2 scenarios:
1. Vest 100 shares at $100 apiece. After tax that's 60 shares * $100 = $6000 total.
2. A sudden price drop causes 100 shares to vest at $50. After tax that's 60 shares * $50 = $3000. Later the price rises to $100 and the employee sells them. Another $3000 in capital gains, leaving $2550 after taxes. Total = $5250.
>2. A sudden price drop causes 100 shares to vest at $50. After tax that's 60 shares * $50 = $3000. [...]
This is only true if you "sell" 40 shares immediately at the time of vesting to pay the tax bill. Because you lose the 40 shares, you don't have as much shares to appreciate in the subsequent upswing. However if you prefer to settle your tax obligations in cash instead, you don't have this issue and you'd actually pay less taxes (assuming the upswing does materialize). It's risky though, because you're basically taking a long position on the stock, and if it falls even more, you'd lose even more money.
> This is only true if you "sell" 40 shares immediately at the time of vesting to pay the tax bill
I wasn't aware there's a choice. That's a paycheck withholding essentially.
Paying taxes isn't optional. Sure you can invest more in the stock with external funds but that's not a fair proposition. If you were to tell me there's a certain chance of a stock going up by 100% we could also just buy calls with those magic funds and make far more money.
In the UK you pay income tax on the initial price; then if you hold the shares before selling capital gains tax on any gains. However CGT is a much lower rate than income tax so I guess it could be a bit advantageous. But you have to factor that against the risk of holding a single company's shares (also the company you work for), against selling and buying into the whole market.
can you show the math for your last statement?
its ironic that IBM sold off its x86 pc/server to Lenovo and kept their big iron (mainframe) but now everyone is buying up pc/server due to AI boom. Dell's stock have been surging with the rest of AI stocks
Lenovo sale was decades ago. IBM could have bought a pc company in 2022 when ChatGPT came out or anytime since.
But strategically they decided against a Hardware play and went for software:
2022- ChatGPT released
2023 - IBM buys Manta Software Inc undisclosed sum
2023 - IBM buys Software AG's StreamSets and webMethods $2.33 billion
2025- IBM buys Hashicorp $6.4 billion
2025 - IBM buys Confluent $11 billion.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HashiCorp
They just need to wait until nobody is selling or can buy new PCs and are forced to use outdated equipment to use as dumb terminals to access those mainframes.
Pretty sad that the company that invented DRAM completely divested itself of actually making any, now that it’s wildly profitable.
[delayed]
I think it made sense on its own terms. They retrenched into the business where they are actually differentiated. It is notable that IBM net margins have been ~15% at best for decades. It's an odd business that is huge and just trucks along without remarkable growth. It is the butt of jokes but also a top 100 company by many measures.
> It's an odd business that is huge and just trucks along without remarkable growth.
This isn’t odd at all. It’s a feature common to most businesses that have been around 100 years or more.
Well, it's odd in that they do this sideways financial performance while also from time to time dropping a state-of-the-art microprocessor, like a real tech giant.
You could also see that it's odd in that most companies from 100 years ago simply don't exist. The perfectly flat trajectory bordering on fade-out is uncommon. The median 100-year-old tech company is Sperry, not IBM.
And then bounces back.
Go buy it right now, profit tomorrow.
Awful advice usually given by red-faced bag holders, lol. Wait for the real bottom, buy it IF it starts to recover.
“Wait for the real bottom” is doing a lot of work.
Tell you what, come back here in 24 hours and let’s touch base and we will see if you or I was right.
IBM currently $217.76 down 24.97% my prediction it bounces back up within 24 hours.
All over the place in Big Blue land:
Jan 28: IBM Mainframe Business Jumps 67%
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46802376
Feb 13: IBM tripling entry-level jobs after finding the limits of AI adoption
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47009327
Feb 23: IBM Plunges After Anthropic's Latest Update Takes on COBOL
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47128907
Apr 30: Granite 4.1: IBM's 8B Model Matching 32B MoE
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47960507
Jun 25: IBM debuts sub-1 nanometer chip technology
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48674967
People will argue that it's not dead yet but they're barely top 100 in the world, when they used to be... Number one.
Ouch.
Now, people are going to argue again but IBM, in its dying breath in 2000, did something really amazing: they committed one billion dollar to finance the development of that little known thing in the world called...
Linux.
Maybe Linux would have been immensely successful even without that one billion dollar investment from IBM but I cannot help but see that move in 2000 as the ultimate revenge move against Microsoft.
IBM knew it was falling into irrelevancy, Microsoft had 95%+ browsers market share and the future looked grim. Apple was in bad shape, smartphones didn't exist yet. It looked like Microsoft would conquer everything else.
Turns out: Microsoft (sadly) mostly kept the desktop but, thankfully, it's Linux that conquered just about everything (and OS X / MacOS / iOS quite a bit too).
So big thanks to IBM for that move.
You can think what you want but to me this what a move to prevent Microsoft from owning the entire software world.
Not sure what the title was when submitting, but current title is: IBM is on pace for its worst day ever
> IBM Stock has worst day
(so far)
What does IBM even do? Something with India, and servicing legacy no-bid government pork contracts, as far as I can tell. That appears to be the focus and has been for a long time.
Make ads lying about how good at AI they are.