Trendingnow

1

FedEx CEO says we are in the middle of the biggest supply chain shift he’s seen in 35 years: ‘We are the referendum’

2

26 Meta employees accuse Mark Zuckerberg of using AI to target 8,000 layoffs against workers on medical, parental or family leave

3

He sold his last company to Palantir. Now he's betting $32 million that robots can fix construction's labor crisis

1

FedEx CEO says we are in the middle of the biggest supply chain shift he’s seen in 35 years: ‘We are the referendum’

2

26 Meta employees accuse Mark Zuckerberg of using AI to target 8,000 layoffs against workers on medical, parental or family leave

3

He sold his last company to Palantir. Now he's betting $32 million that robots can fix construction's labor crisis

Big Tech IBM

‘We did not adapt and move quickly enough’: IBM CEO’s admission of weakness fails to prevent historic 25% stock crash

By Tatiana Sataua Tatiana Sataua

News Fellow Down Arrow Button Icon

By Tatiana Sataua Tatiana Sataua

News Fellow Down Arrow Button Icon

July 15, 2026, 4:56 PM ET

ibm

IBM CEO Arvind Krishna attends a Rose Garden Club event on the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, DC, on July 6, 2026. Mandel NGAN / AFP via Getty Images

Add Fortune on Google for similar content.

Add us on Google

Add us on Google

IBM shares tumbled Tuesday as CEO Arvind Krishna acknowledged in an unusual letter to investors that the company had failed to adapt quickly enough, a blunt admission that followed a surprise earnings miss and sent the stock toward its worst drop in decades.

Recommended Video


Fortune talked to several analysts about the resulting 25% stock crash, the worst single-day decline in a company history dating back 115 years, but perhaps none was as damning as Krishna’s own words.

“These conditions [in markets] require our teams to execute perfectly, and this quarter we faltered,” he wrote. “We did not adapt and move quickly enough, and numerous large deals failed to close on the timelines we expected.”

Krishna pointed to weakness in its software and infrastructure businesses driven by a shift in client activity. The CEO attributed the shortfall in part to a late-quarter change in client behavior, with several large transactions slipping into future quarters.

Holger Mueller, VP and principal analyst at Constellation Research, said enterprises are diverting capital expenditure to “other platforms” with mainframe upgrades and purchases, IBM’s typical bread and butter, getting delayed. “That is rare, as it is critical infrastructure,” Mueller added, but it definitely “shows the AI pull” in this market.

The delay has broader implications for IBM’s business, where hardware sales often drive software revenue.

“The impact on IBM is double,” Mueller said. “On one side, it hits hardware and infrastructure, but it also affects software, as mainframe sales typically trigger direct software revenue.”

That dynamic reflects a wider reprioritization across enterprise IT spending.

Shay Boloor, chief market strategist at Futurum, said the delays reflect both shifting customer priorities and IBM’s own execution challenges, as companies redirected spending toward servers, storage, and memory ahead of expected price increases.

“Companies are prioritizing scarce hardware and delaying projects they believe can wait,” Boloor said. “That pressure is hitting consulting, transformation projects, and legacy infrastructure the hardest.”

IBM is exposed on both sides of that shift, he added, with hybrid cloud positioned to benefit from AI adoption while mainframes and project-based services face more near-term pressure.

Patrick Moorhead, CEO and chief analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy, said enterprises are being squeezed by rising AI-related costs.

“IT budgets are growing but price increases are growing more quickly than budgets,” said Moorhead. “Therefore other expenses need to be reduced to pay for it.”

Since taking over IBM as CEO in 2020, Krishna has worked to reposition IBM around “AI and hybrid cloud” aiming to modernize the company and compete in a rapidly evolving market.

“The good news for IBM is that their technology is strategic and can’t be held off for long periods of time and will bounce back,” Moorhead said.

IBM declined to comment beyond its statement and is scheduled to report full results next Wednesday.

Subscribe to Fortune Gulf Brief. Every Tuesday, this new newsletter delivers clear-eyed, authoritative intelligence on the deals, decisions, policies, and power shifts shaping one of the world’s most consequential regions, written for the people who need to act on it. Sign up here.

About the Author

By Tatiana SatauaNews Fellow

Tatiana Sataua is a News Fellow at Fortune covering breaking news, policy, and business.

See full bioRight Arrow Button Icon

Add Fortune on Google for similar content.

Add us on Google


Latest in Big Tech



tesla

Big Tech Tesla

Runaway Tesla that crashed into a grandmother’s living room was actually being steered by a human, investigators find

By Bernard Condon and The Associated PressJuly 16, 2026

4 hours ago

Warren Buffett rides in a golf cart

Big Tech Warren Buffett

Buffett says AI giants are ‘playing a game they don’t want to play’ in the AI race, reveals he was behind Berkshire’s $31 billion bet on Google

By Mia OsmonbekovJuly 16, 2026

4 hours ago

eu

AI Google

EU orders Google to share search data with rivals by 2027; search giant complains about ‘unfamiliar companies’ in your grill

By The Associated PressJuly 16, 2026

10 hours ago

Elon Musk loses trillionaire status as SpaceX stock deflates—and Wisconsin officials want him investigated for election ‘bribery’

Newsletters Markets

Elon Musk loses trillionaire status as SpaceX stock deflates—and Wisconsin officials want him investigated for election ‘bribery’

By Jim EdwardsJuly 16, 2026

13 hours ago

ibm

Big Tech IBM

‘We did not adapt and move quickly enough’: IBM CEO’s admission of weakness fails to prevent historic 25% stock crash

By Tatiana SatauaJuly 15, 2026

1 day ago

usa

AI earnings

Why IBM just suffered its worst stock crash of all time—and what it says about the market’s two bubbles

By Nick LichtenbergJuly 15, 2026

1 day ago


Most Popular



FedEx CEO says we are in the middle of the biggest supply chain shift he’s seen in 35 years: ‘We are the referendum’

C-Suite

FedEx CEO says we are in the middle of the biggest supply chain shift he’s seen in 35 years: ‘We are the referendum’

By Fortune EditorsJuly 15, 2026

1 day ago

26 Meta employees accuse Mark Zuckerberg of using AI to target 8,000 layoffs against workers on medical, parental or family leave

Law

26 Meta employees accuse Mark Zuckerberg of using AI to target 8,000 layoffs against workers on medical, parental or family leave

By Barbara Ortutay, Alexandra Olson and The Associated PressJuly 15, 2026

1 day ago

He sold his last company to Palantir. Now he's betting $32 million that robots can fix construction's labor crisis

Innovation

He sold his last company to Palantir. Now he's betting $32 million that robots can fix construction's labor crisis

By Lily Mae LazarusJuly 15, 2026

1 day ago

Trump's 'American Flag Blue' in the Lincoln Memorial pool is already gray — and the Olympic canoer 'vandal' is fighting his arrest

Politics

Trump's 'American Flag Blue' in the Lincoln Memorial pool is already gray — and the Olympic canoer 'vandal' is fighting his arrest

By Matthew Daly and The Associated PressJuly 16, 2026

11 hours ago

MacKenzie Scott, Melinda French Gates, and Lauren Sánchez Bezos are rewriting the rules of billionaire giving—one quietly, one strategically, one very publicly

Newsletters

MacKenzie Scott, Melinda French Gates, and Lauren Sánchez Bezos are rewriting the rules of billionaire giving—one quietly, one strategically, one very publicly

By Sydney LakeJuly 14, 2026

2 days ago

After donating $48 billion to the Gates Foundation, Warren Buffett is quietly ending one of the biggest philanthropic relationships in history

North America

After donating $48 billion to the Gates Foundation, Warren Buffett is quietly ending one of the biggest philanthropic relationships in history

By Marco Quiroz-GutierrezJuly 14, 2026

2 days ago

Read Original at Fortune