Why the Hard Times for Software Stocks May Be Over, At Least for a Little While

I suspect that unless you are directly involved with software companies, or own software stocks, you never expected what went down last fall. The entire software industry, as depicted by the Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV), fell off a cliff. No, make that a steep mountain! It lost 35% in a hurry. Now it is…


Why the Hard Times for Software Stocks May Be Over, At Least for a Little While

I suspect that unless you are directly involved with software companies, or own software stocks, you never expected what went down last fall. The entire software industry, as depicted by the Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV), fell off a cliff.

No, make that a steep mountain! It lost 35% in a hurry. Now it is rebounding, up 20% in just a couple of weeks. Is this the big comeback? Maybe. But since we canโ€™t predict the future, we can assess the odds. I think they are improving. Hereโ€™s why.

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If I just focus on the daily chart shown above, Iโ€™m a buyer. It bottomed in what is nearly a โ€œhead and shouldersโ€ pattern, given that big push down during the first half of April. Recovering in the price pattern it did is where part of my optimism comes from.

The bigger part of it, which gets me from the โ€œhigh risk/high returnโ€ situation that resolved itself nicely last month into this month, to โ€œhas the makings of a nice moveโ€ is the recent price breakout. That just happened, and if it doesnโ€™t fizzle by early next week, IGV could be a โ€œflyerโ€ again.

The weekly chart backs this up. The percentage price oscillator (PPO) is close to ideal, albeit maybe a bit early. See how it looks similar to the summer 2022 bottom? But you can also see there were some false starts. Like a poorly coached NFL offensive lineman.

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Still, it recovered eventually, and more than doubled in price the next three years. Iโ€™ll say this: I like this a lot better under $100 a share than I did when it was nearly $120 and peaking on my favorite indicators.

Speaking of my favorite indicators, my ROAR Score also indicates thereโ€™s something interesting going on here. The last time the score was green (lower risk) was for much of 2025. As you can see, green is more of a โ€œcopaceticโ€ zone, since an ETF or stock may have already had a nice run by that point. Low risk is not the same as โ€œpriced to move.โ€ Still, the charts above, and this one below, help me be optimistic here.

Chart courtesy of Rob Isbitts via PiTrade.com
Chart courtesy of Rob Isbitts via PiTrade.com

And if you are wondering why the ROAR Score just turned to yellow (50) as you see in the upper right section of the chart, thatโ€™s what is supposed to happen. ROAR, unlike many technical systems, is built to automatically downgrade the risk level of a stock or ETF after it shoots higher. Markets just donโ€™t maintain those big moves up or down like they used to. Too much of a trader and algorithm element is present now. Thus, the 50, and not 70 or 80, as a current ROAR Score.

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