By Anhata Rooprai
April 22 (Reuters) – IBM’s revenue growth slowed in the first quarter on sluggishness in its software business, fanning fears of disruption from artificial โintelligence tools and sending its shares down 6.5% after hours on Wednesday.
Concerns โthat AI will eat into the software business have grown with the launch of tools that can automate โroutine corporate functions.
IBM has especially been hit after Anthropic said in February one of its tools could help modernize COBOL, a language widely used on the company’s mainframes.
Big Blue’s revenue increased 9% in the first quarter to $15.92 billion, slower than the 12.2% growth in the โprevious quarter, even as it โ surpassed analysts’ average estimate of $15.62 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.
IBM’s software segment, anchored by its high-margin hybrid cloud unit Red Hat, โ and a suite of AI tools under the Watsonx brand, also posted slower revenue growth of 11.3%.
“The stakes around these results were higher than normal given the software/services selling pressure โthe market โhas seen this year amid AI competition fears, โand we do not think Q1โs โresults validated those fears,” CFRA analyst Brooks Idlet said.
Growth in the companyโs infrastructure segment remained strong, helped by continued adoption of its latest mainframe systems. Revenue in the segment, which includes mainframe computers, grew 15.2% to $3.33 billion in the quarter.
Analysts have said IBM’s deep customer ties and AI offerings, such as the Watsonx Code Assistant, a coding โmodernization tool for the mainframe, could help it against โrival AI tools.
CFO James Kavanaugh told Reuters clients โusing the tool are seeing faster โgrowth in mainframe consumption. “Gen AI in modernization of mainframe is actually โan accelerator and accretive to the mainframe โportfolio overall,” he said.
IBM’s โadjusted quarterly profit came in at $1.91 per share, compared with estimates of $1.81.
On a post-earnings call, CEO Arvind Krishna downplayed the impact of the Middle East conflict, โsaying that IBM had its โstrongest growth in the region in decades and could absorb disruption from the โclosure of the Strait of Hormuz for another few weeks.
(Reporting by Anhata โRooprai in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel)