International Business Machines’ stock is the latest big software loser that can trace its selloff to fears over new artificial-intelligence features. Back To Top ...
IBM stock was down 10% on Monday afternoon after Anthropic published a blog post about how its Claude Code tool can be used to modernize software written in the COBOL language, which handles ...
In brief: Amid multiple depressing reports of AI causing job layoffs and white-collar workers under threat, here's some rare positive news: IBM is tripling the number of entry-level workers it plans ...
While the artificial intelligence industry touts that AI will replace entry-level jobs, not every company is scaling back hiring these positions. In IBM’s case, it’s going all in. Hardware giant IBM ...
International Business Machines Corp. raised nearly $7.5 billion in the corporate bond market, kicking off what is expected to be a flood of borrowing from the tech sector in 2026. The US firm on ...
IBM (NYSE: IBM) exceeded earnings expectations and demonstrated that its AI strategy is effective. Q4 revenue reached $19.69 billion compared to the anticipated $19.21 billion—a 12.1% increase from ...
As expected, IBM reported solid Q4 earnings with 12% reported growth somewhat boosted by acquisitions, while constant currency sales only grew at a 9% clip. The initial assumption driving the stock ...
Throughout its 115-year life IBM has shown itself to be a master of reinvention. In the mid-1990s the mainframe pioneer rescued itself from collapse by shifting its focus to the booming business of IT ...
IBM Corp. today introduced a software platform designed to give enterprises and governments more direct control over artificial intelligence and cloud workloads in response to tightening sovereignty ...
IBM struck a deal to add Confluent to its rapidly expanding cloud portfolio. The data-streaming platform could accelerate IBM's AI initiatives. Confluent's open-source platform helps businesses gather ...
There is an old saying: “Nobody ever got fired for buying IBM.” For decades, this phrase was more than a wry joke—it was a reflection of the near-mythic status of Big Blue in the world of business ...