So here's what's actually happening with AI and software in 2026—it's not the doomsday scenario everyone feared back in 2023. Wall Street's big money is pouring into software stocks at a pace we haven't seen in years. Why? Because institutional investors finally figured out that AI isn't killing the software business; it's actually turbocharging it.
Think about it. Every company running operations today needs software infrastructure. Add AI capabilities on top? That's a compounding effect. You're not replacing software; you're making it smarter. Revenue multiples are reflecting this reality now.
The narrative shifted hard. Two years ago, the anxiety was real—"will AI replace developers?" "Do we still need software?" Fast forward to today, and funds are betting that the answer is no. Instead, software companies are becoming AI-native, which is something entirely different.
Investors are watching adoption rates climb. Enterprise deals are getting bigger. Margins are expanding because automation is real. It's not speculation anymore; it's backed by quarterly earnings and customer retention metrics.
Bottom line? The software sector is entering a growth phase that most people underestimated. Wall Street's buying pressure is a vote of confidence—and the market's responding.
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LightningHarvester
· 4h ago
Ha, I told you so. Those who claimed two years ago that "AI will wipe out programmers" should be feeling embarrassed now.
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JustHereForMemes
· 13h ago
NGL, the hype that AI in 2023 will wipe out software is really just overblown panic... It now seems like typical anxiety during a technological turning point.
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MemeTokenGenius
· 01-10 16:36
I've been saying it all along, AI is not a software killer, it's an accelerator... Do those pessimists from last year still feel embarrassed now?
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CantAffordPancake
· 01-10 16:23
I've been saying that the software won't die, and only now are those who are just realizing it starting to regret it.
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GweiWatcher
· 01-10 16:15
ngl Two years ago, those people were really scared. Now it seems they were just worrying over nothing. Software didn't die; it actually took off.
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OnchainArchaeologist
· 01-10 16:14
Haha, you're right... The arguments two years ago that "AI will replace programmers" now seem a bit embarrassing in hindsight.
Speaking of which, institutions are really starting to pour in heavy investments; the data is right there.
Software hasn't died; on the contrary, it's becoming more valuable... this turnaround is happening pretty quickly.
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SchrödingersNode
· 01-10 16:08
Haha, two years ago, a bunch of people were scared into changing careers, and now software stocks are skyrocketing again... The contrast is truly incredible.
So here's what's actually happening with AI and software in 2026—it's not the doomsday scenario everyone feared back in 2023. Wall Street's big money is pouring into software stocks at a pace we haven't seen in years. Why? Because institutional investors finally figured out that AI isn't killing the software business; it's actually turbocharging it.
Think about it. Every company running operations today needs software infrastructure. Add AI capabilities on top? That's a compounding effect. You're not replacing software; you're making it smarter. Revenue multiples are reflecting this reality now.
The narrative shifted hard. Two years ago, the anxiety was real—"will AI replace developers?" "Do we still need software?" Fast forward to today, and funds are betting that the answer is no. Instead, software companies are becoming AI-native, which is something entirely different.
Investors are watching adoption rates climb. Enterprise deals are getting bigger. Margins are expanding because automation is real. It's not speculation anymore; it's backed by quarterly earnings and customer retention metrics.
Bottom line? The software sector is entering a growth phase that most people underestimated. Wall Street's buying pressure is a vote of confidence—and the market's responding.