While the broader market held its ground, the software sector didn't just leak—it hemorrhaged. $Palantir Technologies Inc.(PLTR)$ , $Salesforce.com(CRM)$ and $AppLovin Corporation(APP)$ all tumbled in a move that signals a massive shift in market structure.
What’s happening?
OpenAI & Anthropic threats software again
Two major announcements acted as the "last straw" for investors yesterday:
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OpenAI’s Revenue Pivot: CRO Diane Drexel revealed that enterprise business now accounts for over 40% of OpenAI’s revenue, on track to match consumer revenue by year-end. With Codex hitting 3 million weekly active users, the message is clear: the AI giants are eating the lunch of traditional dev-tool and enterprise software firms.
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Anthropic’s "Managed Agents": Anthropic just launched a suite of API tools designed to turn AI from a "chatbot" into a "production system." They claim a 10x boost in deployment efficiency. By solving the engineering complexity for enterprises, they are effectively making "middleware" SaaS companies obsolete.
The death of the "per-seat" model: why SaaS is being rewritten?
Why is the SaaS model fundamentally broken? Because the unit of labor has changed.
Traditional SaaS assumes a human user with limited attention and an 8-hour workday. An AI Agent can ping an API at 3 AM, processing data at millisecond speeds without fatigue.
Pricing is shifting from "marketing packages" to inference costs and task throughput.
Wall Street loved SaaS for its "Predictable Recurring Revenue (ARR)." But when your customer is an Agent, usage (and revenue) becomes wildly volatile based on task demand, while infrastructure costs remain elastic.
Is Wall Street losing money? Not really.
Capital is exiting traditional software (the legacy code) and flowing into the new infrastructure: Anthropic and OpenAI. It’s the same "Software" story, just with a fresh set of underlying code and a much more aggressive pricing power.
Discussion
Are you holding the line on CRM and PLTR, or are you waiting for the "Systemic Flash Crash" to pick up the pieces?
Is the SaaS subscription model officially a "Legacy" play?
Is Palantir’s dip a buying opportunity?
Leave your comments to win tiger coins!
Comments
The bigger issue is the “per-seat” SaaS model looking outdated. If AI agents replace or augment users, companies like Salesforce.com and AppLovin Corporation could face pressure on pricing and growth. If revenue shifts toward usage and compute, the predictability Wall Street loved may fade, changing how I view these names long term.
I’m not rushing to sell, but I’m also not blindly buying dips. I’ll monitor how Palantir Technologies Inc. adapts, and I’m open to trimming if the thesis weakens. This feels like a moment where flexibility matters more than conviction.
@TigerStars @Tiger_comments @TigerClub
2. No, subscription model is the usual in this industry
3. Plantir is a government. Contracting agency which depends on government contracts
Not waiting for a “flash crash” base case. CRM = hold / buy on dips (cash flow, margin story intact). PLTR = trade tactically, sentiment-driven.
SaaS = legacy?
No. Pure subscription is commoditised, but SaaS + AI + usage pricing = evolving, not dying. Winners shift to data + outcomes.
PLTR dip?
Only a buy if earnings confirm strong pipeline + guidance. Otherwise, risk of ongoing de-rating.
Bottom line:
CRM steady; PLTR selective. Keep cash, but do not anchor on crash timing.