Shares of Accenture (ACN) began Friday’s session at $186.04 following a 4% decline that pushed the stock to a new 52-week low. The stock’s trading range over the past year now spans from $182.38 to $325.71. Investor sentiment soured after the company’s forward-looking revenue projections fell short of analyst expectations.
For fiscal year 2026, Accenture’s management team projected revenue between $71.8 billion and $73.2 billion. Wall Street consensus had anticipated approximately $73.9 billion. This shortfall triggered the selloff that sent shares to their lowest point in twelve months, despite otherwise robust quarterly performance.
The company’s latest quarterly results revealed earnings per share of $2.93, surpassing analyst estimates of $2.84 by nine cents. Revenue totaled $18.04 billion, representing a 7.8% increase compared to the prior-year period and exceeding the $17.80 billion forecast. The firm posted a return on equity of 26.33%.
Accenture also declared a quarterly dividend of $1.63 per share, scheduled for distribution on May 15 to shareholders of record as of April 9. Based on current trading levels, this translates to an annualized yield of 3.5%.
UBS analyst Kevin McVeigh released a research report identifying what he characterizes as a market valuation disconnect. His analysis centered on Accenture’s recent acquisition of Keepler Data Tech, a Spanish firm that brings approximately 240 experts specializing in data science, machine learning, and cloud infrastructure.
McVeigh’s central thesis argues that the market hasn’t fully recognized the sophistication and velocity of Accenture’s artificial intelligence initiatives. From the introduction of generative AI services in fiscal 2023 through fiscal 2025, the company expanded AI-related revenue to approximately $2.7 billion—representing a compound annual growth rate near 200%. This trajectory surpasses even Accenture’s early cloud computing expansion, which achieved roughly 132% annual growth during its initial phase.
The company elevated its fiscal 2026 acquisition spending target from $3 billion to $5 billion. Accenture has already committed approximately $1.6 billion across multiple transactions, including NeuraFlash, Halfspace, and Decho. McVeigh interprets this aggressive M&A strategy as evidence of a deliberate pivot toward technology-intensive, higher-margin services and away from conventional labor-dependent consulting models.
Accenture currently employs over 85,000 AI specialists. Contract bookings related to AI and data initiatives are projected to more than double during fiscal 2026.
Institutional shareholders have maintained active trading in ACN shares throughout recent quarters. Capital International Investors expanded its holdings by 41.1% during Q3, accumulating more than 17 million shares worth approximately $4.2 billion. Massachusetts Financial Services increased its position by 12.8%, now controlling around 10.1 million shares.
DDD Partners LLC established a fresh position during Q4, purchasing 9,090 shares valued at roughly $2.44 million.
Institutional and hedge fund ownership currently represents 75.14% of outstanding shares.
Wall Street analyst sentiment leans positive despite recent caution. Eighteen analysts maintain Buy recommendations on the stock, while ten rate it as Hold. The consensus price target sits at $274.88, significantly above current trading levels.
Technical indicators show the stock’s 50-day moving average at $210.98 and its 200-day moving average at $241.88. Friday’s opening price placed ACN below both benchmarks.
The post Accenture (ACN) Stock Plunges to 52-Week Low — UBS Analyst Sees Major AI Opportunity Being Overlooked appeared first on Blockonomi.