IBM
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I’m an “newer” autist. What is the potential for these in the coming 2 days after the $IBM blow out?
The Coming Analog Age: Bullish Scenario For Texas Instruments, Analog Devices, Qualcomm, Tower Semiconductor, IBM?
YOLO Alert: Boeing on the Brink – Why WSB Traders Should Short the Skies
Twitter-backer knocks billions off its value after Musk’s ‘go f--- yourself’ outburst
Twitter-backer knocks billions off its value after Musk’s ‘go f--- yourself’ outburst
Ken Griffin Now Makes Surprising Claims Confirming Illegal Manipulation
Cyberwarfare is The Weapon of Choice for Current Global Conflicts
Thoughts on IBM switching from 401k's to Pensions?
I am new to stocks and created my first portfolio - what are your thoughts and inputs?
Cyberwarfare is The Weapon of Choice for Current Global Conflicts
Remark Holdings' customers include the Las Vegas Raiders and the Las Vegas Police
Remark Holdings' customers include the Las Vegas Raiders and the Las Vegas Police
Integrated Cyber (ICS:CSE) takes steps to reduce the Growing Impact and Cost of Ransomware and Data Breaches
Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Hits Record $157 Billion Cash
Integrated Cyber (ICS:CSE) takes steps to reduce the Growing Impact and Cost of Ransomware and Data Breaches
Data Provider for Adjusted Historical Prices with Last Data Updated in the Middle of Trading Day?
I wanted to try to invest in 10 completely random stocks to see if this beats the market in 1 year, so I asked ChatGTP...
FWIW: AAPL market cap 18x that of IBM
POTENTIAL RUNNER! New IPO W/$8 Billion Valuation - Sept 13 Run Down🔥
The next stock I am researching: $ASPI
ASP Isotopes ($ASPI) looking to get into quantum computing
IBM rolls out new generative AI features and models | TechCrunch
9/5 Pre-market TMT Breakout: $PINS better metrics, $AAPL neg impact from Huawei phone/new $IBM?, $DIS Bull case, $NTAP upgrade, $ORCL upgrad
Pre-market TMT Breakout - $PINS better metrics, $AAPL neg impact from Huawei phone/new $IBM?, $DIS Bull case, $NTAP upgrade, $ORCL upgrade on better runway growth, $ABNB to join SP500
$WHSI joins Next Realm AI Research Lab, an IBM Business partner, for Wearable Health Data
WHSI joins Next Realm AI Research Lab for Wearable Health Data
Butterflies & Iron Condors: Assignment Risk vs. Duration & Stock Selection
GBT Segmental Update: Magic2 a Suite of Eight AI Driven EDA Tools Assisting Engineers with Faster Semiconductor Design
LK-99 - The Potential Revolutionary Room-Temperature Superconductor
Asked ChatGPT what the market impact would be if it was confirmed that aliens exist
My AI momentum trading journey just started. Dumping $3k into an automated trading strategy guided by ChatGPT. Am I gonna make it
The AI trading journey begins. Throwing $3k into automated trading strategies. Will I eat a bag of dicks? Roast me if you must
Integrated Cyber, An Upcoming AI Cybersecurity IPO To Take Notice Of
Investment plan for about 85 000$ USD over the coming year
Investment plan for about 85 000$ USD over the coming year
Integrated Cyber, An Upcoming AI Cybersecurity IPO To Take Notice Of
Opened my paper trading account and made some options!
Potential Pennystock of the Year: $OSS - One Stop Systems
Potential Pennystock of the Year: $OSS - One Stop Systems
Potential Pennystock of the Year: $OSS - One Stop Systems
Nearly half of Warren Buffett's $366 Billion Portfolio is invested in only 1 stock
Who can strengthen cyber security?
This isn’t a bubble it’s a revolution, like the industrial revolution, just on a grand scale.
The AI hype is not what investors say it is, heres why im shorting the AI bubble
Profiting off the potential power grid failure. Overall thoughts and discussion.
I asked ChatGPT how to profit off of a power grid failure.
Unleashing the Hybrid Cloud AI Revolution: Nvidia's DGX, IBM's Ansible, and the Perfect Storm
Unleashing the Hybrid Cloud AI Revolution: Nvidia's DGX, IBM's Ansible, and the Perfect Storm
Unleashing the Hybrid Cloud AI Revolution: Nvidia's DGX, IBM's Ansible, and the Perfect Storm
IBM: Not Your Grandma's Boyfriend’s Favorite Tech Giant Anymore, Pioneering the AI Revolution Like a Boss
IBM Will Launch Partnership with Global Universities to Develop a 100,000-Qubit Quantum-Centric Supercomputer
Shopify ($SHOP) delivers impressive earnings, enticing investors to consider buying the stock.
Today, Dallas, Texas was disrupted by a large cyberattack impacting multiple services and important computer systems, emphasizing the need for cybersecurity investment for all sizes of businesses - CyberCatch's (CYBE.v) patented AI-enabled platform solves the root cause of these attacks.
IBM will lay off thousands of employees. Their work will be taken over by artificial intelligence
Capitalizing on the AI Boom: Companies Poised to Benefit from Artificial Intelligence Adoption
U.S. stocks trade lower as traders eye earnings from Morgan Stanley, IBM
IBM, TSM, NOK rocket 🚀 🤣
Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Tesla, Las Vegas Sands, IBM and more
IBM misses first-quarter revenue estimates as corporate IT spending shrinks
Weekly Earnings Digest for Options Traders: NFLX, TSLA, IBM, GS, T, SCHW and more!
Expected Moves: Low IV Trading and Earnings from Netflix, Tesla, Goldman, IBM and more.
AI Stocks: 5 Companies Leading the AI Revolution
Debunking Kerrisdale Capital's Bearish Take on C3.ai
VERSES AI ($VRSSF) The ONLY pure horizontal AI play
dividend stocks - what are your favourites and why ?
NVDA still overvalued and AI wont change the world because its been around a long time. Just another boom bust Cycle.
Mentions
IBM investors happy their CEO is sucking 🥭's cock to pump the stock
I had some of it. I was surprised nobody else was interested in the stock considering it was an open secret they wanted to be acquired. Lots of companies knew they were valuable too, and I think IBM got a steal at an $11B valuation. I also own IBM
So anyone who says inverse Kramer has no idea what they're talking about. He's been banging on about GEV, IBM, HON over the last couple of months. Two of those worked out pretty decently.
I’m a mature adult and buy IBM leaps
I mean even if they do subsidize it it's likely going to be towards companies like IBM and Google and not a soda beverage company like QUBT that "pivoted" to quantum a couple years ago lol
IBM was once synonymous with computing and high technology. Today they do business consulting and have a sad portfolio of abandoned technologies that were going to make them relevant again and IP nobody wants to license. Maybe don’t follow predictions about the future from their CEO-of-the-month, Mr what’s-his-name.
Sounds about right to me, though I would lean more on IBM....
The best two quantum computing stocks are GOOG and IBM. Everyone else is gonna go bankrupt.
Holy shit, IBM actually making moves that don't involve mainframes from 1985
It’s also worth having some money in other sectors, like discretionary, healthcare, staples, defense! Also foreign etfs like Chile, Vietnam those have given me great returns! The problem is ur concentrated into the IT sector! The ones u have like applied digital and wulf potentially navitas have a chance to make a shot higher! But id also have thoose enforced by tech companies that are more established ie IBM, Intel, Microsoft, Nvidia! With the rate cut u will likely recover half of thoose positions! Best of luck my friend!
I wouldn't put too many hopes or bets on AI right now. For starters, AI is dumb as a post. IBM's Deep Blue beat a Grandmaster chess champion in 1996, the first time a computer had done so. Today, even if you have never played ChatGPT, you can win a game of chess against it. It is dumb as a post. But second: Boomers occupy mostly senior roles, they are advanced in their careers. Those are jobs less likely to be replaced by AI. These are not content streamers and social media personalities who can be replaced by AI today, these are the CEOs, CFOs, etc. Their retirement does represent a possible largest job-vacancy void of all time, and companies will have to fill those rolls.
IBM buys a free software not related to AI for $12 bn to improve it's AI offerings 😂
I invested 1500$ in CFLT in 2021, and most of the time ever since it has been negative. I do believe this is one of the best players in the data streaming space, but seeing IBM finalising the acquisition for 31$ per share is finally going to put me in profit territory. Thank you, IBM, very cool!
I worked there, this is the answer. Banks, governments, and airlines across the world are stuck with IBM until nuclear winter. These companies have 50+ years of business logic on iSeries mainframes and every attempt to move away from them has failed.
There was no comp adjustment with IBM in my couple years working there post acq. I did end up going some place that paid better eventually. I believe IBM will only mess with Confluent if they don’t make money and hit internal goals, which is exactly what would have happened if they stayed public. Just like Red Hat, IBM is buying Confluent more for the people then the technology. Kafka is Kafka. It’s the people that makes the difference. But if the people don’t perform, IBM will have consequences for Confluent just like the street has in the past.
Was that a big comp adjustment when they took over Red Hat? Confluent pay is considerably higher than IBM.
My experience with an IBM acquisition was nothing like the doom narrative you’re selling. Yes, there was sales friction, but the business grew, smart people stayed, and none of the apocalyptic FUD you’re pushing ever happened. I was at Red Hat. The place is still full of extremely competent engineers doing real work, not whatever caricature you’re imagining. IBM is enormous. Some acquisitions are disasters, some aren’t. Pretending your outcome is the universal one just signals that you’ve generalized a personal failure into a grand theory. As for Scott Adams, he’s not some insider sage documenting corporate life. He’s a conspiracy-minded crank who pivoted into grievance monetization. There’s nothing profound about it, and invoking him doesn’t strengthen your argument. If your experience was that catastrophic, I am sorry you went through that, but don’t project it onto everyone else. What you’re describing sounds more like a you-problem than an IBM-problem.
\>>Will open more IBM position soon How much do you think IBM will grow beyond its current position?
Na, it's pretty typical without many exceptions... also it's not just IBM, although they are certainly a case study in bureaucracy and mismanagement. The dilbert cartoons are literally about IBM and the like, the creator worked there for a while.
Just buy IBM or GOOG if you want exposure to quantum
If IBM will pay $31 per share tomorrow, why confluent shares are priced 30$now?
Not much will change for the first year, except they'll let go most of your HR, Marketing, and Sales in favor of their own teams. Then a year later you'll realize that their sales people were not selling because they didn't know your products and your products compete with things they were already selling. Also you'll realize that the hiring/promotion freeze wasn't actually temporary while they integrated. The 401k 6% match is nice though so you tell yourself it's fine. Then at about year 2 the HR/sales issues start causing spreadsheets to turn red so they start micromanaging, solutions will have to use certain hardware IBM makes, or certain software components that IBM owns, etc. Any innovation grinds to a halt, and by year 3 you'll look around and and realize all the skilled people left months ago.
IBM does have enterprise software. It's not amazing but it works and can be cost effective. For example, media post-processing companies use them a lot. you don't see it because it's not aimed at customers and their pain points.
IBM has been trying to get in on a ai boom for over a decade. Same with NVDA. It just took LLMs to make it the new hotness.
Even IBM is trying to get in on the AI boom. Yes..IBM. This aint a fugging bubble. This is the next industrial revolution.
As someone whose company was bought by IBM once, my condolences to the Confluent employees.
I work at IBM, and when I started this question they made it a point to answer this. It's probably propaganda but the way it was described to us was that IBM was a behind the scenes company for other companies. They gave us examples, but the only ones I can remember are: \- Have you scanned your credit card today? At some point along the process, of paying, you've used an IBM system \- Have you gone to Walmart or Target recently? Their entire logistics / inventory is IBM systems From who I've seen my team work with, it's kind of true.
IBM does not compete in the same industries as other AI companies and has a complete monopoly in their space. Highly regulated entities. Its a small niche but completely monopolized by IBM with no competition performance and service wise.
IBM and their chase for all things dead.
Damn, Confluent has good products so I hope IBM doesn’t drop the ball on this
Their main thing is still mainframes and legacy software. Neither of which are likely to go away soon. The moment it does IBM will keel over. I worked there for a couple years before being laid off and trust me when I tell you, their AI is complete and utter dog shit.
Calling it software is an insult to anybody who can turn on a computer. At this point IBM is only relevant because of boomer CEOs who can barely work their cellphones much less gauge a competent company and acquiring companies while they still have some relevancy. I’d take memecoins over whatever useless sht IBM pumps out
IBM doing what IBM does best. Massive purchases that add little value and work to alienate employees. The blue blood can never be fully drenched from these people and Arvind I thought would be different
Dang I was already up 45% on CFLT. IBM is still in business??
What does IBM do now? I know they support their legacy software that no one can replace at exhoberant fees and what else?
Do you think IBM is not an Indian dev shop ? They are match made in heaven.
IBM is in shopping spree because it’s struggling to stay relevant in Data & AI.
Expensive AF I’d have done cash and shares because IBM stock is grossly overvalued on hype.
Looking at IBM for that very reason.
It will, and it will be named "A google company". Or IBM.
IBM is more about doing than marketing. Like, they make their own shit - they made a 1.4nm chip in 2021, when everyone was on 7nm.
This is the first tine I've thought about IBM in a decade.
IBM Nears Roughly $11 Billion Deal for Confluent https://www.wsj.com/business/deals/ibm-nears-roughly-11-billion-deal-for-confluent-276f52d8
But that's the thing, most of them wouldn't be out of business if they didn't jump. Nvidia doesn't have much of a choice, all of their valuation is wrapped up in this AI craze but companies like Google and Amazon (and IBM for this discussion) have business segments that aren't going to just disapear with AI. You also don't have to be the first to jump. Nor do you need to jump with everything you've got.
Then why participate? If you're gonna mock the OP at least make a reasonable comment 😂. It's like talking about goog, and then coming in here with some oracle vs IBM comparison.
40 years ago, the largest company in the world was IBM at roughly $30B. So if that performance continued, it would actually be $300T. Compound interest is very difficult to wrap our heads around.
The only quantum play is IBM.
IBM was around in 1985. Do the math. There was a decade of double digit inflation, that's adds up.
It's pretty easy to work out. I went to google finance and got a 1996 level for the S&P500 at 747.70. It's now 6870.40. The 29th root of that ratio is 1.0795 or 7.95%. For the Dow GF goes back to 1985, so the 40th root of 47954.99/1477.18 is 9.1%. For the Nasdaq, we hit 11.2% despite the timescale including that nasty 8 years at the beginning of the century. A major part of the reason I retired so early is that my long-term investments were in leveraged funds, so I was seeing more like 12-16% for 25 years. The reason 30Trillion sounds ludicrous to you is because today it would be. If, in 1985, you'd told someone there'd be a half-dozen trillion-dollar companies in 2025 they'd give you a blank stare. At the time, IBM was the highest market cap company in the world and they were worth $30 Billion. In the last 40 years, the size of the largest company has increased 100x, or 12.2% per year. This suggests that we should see 300Trillion companies by 2065. Though, adjusted for inflation, that'll be more like $25 Trillion in today's currency.
Yea gate model is actually considered as the ‘completed’ version, which all of the current quantum companies or even big players like IBM Google is researching on. Annealing is only great becuz it can be applied to the real world scenario. And the ionization you mentioned is actually the architecture, and isn’t right to compare it with annealing.
Long term, stocks beat inflation, so inflation alone does not explain it. IBM was worth about $96 billion in 1985, which is roughly $300 billion in today’s dollars. If inflation were the only factor, the largest company today should be around that size. But Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, and others are worth multiple trillions. That is not inflation. The stock market and global economy are far larger than in 1985, and today’s dominant companies operate on a completely different scale. Modern megacaps benefit from global, high-margin, asset-light businesses, winner-take-most dynamics, network effects and platform lock-in, and the rise of passive indexing, which channels massive automatic inflows into the biggest names and amplifies their lead. Today’s winners dominate the market in a way 1980s companies could not. Inflation explains maybe a three times increase. The rest comes from structural changes in the economy and how capital flows into equities.
The companies building these huge centers have billions to burn. If it doesn't work. They shutter it and move on. If they are right they set themselves for the future. IBM hasn't been a great predictor of what's right for 50 years.
AT&T and IBM’s blunders are legendary. Am sure there are hundreds of case studies about lost opportunity and mismanagement at both organizations. The distain that both organizations have for their customers and employees truly should be studied. AT&T had the GLOBAL monopoly on communications and the transmission of data 60 years ago and is now a small player in the space. IBM gave birth to the two largest software companies in the world, Microsoft and SAP through complete gross mismanagement. It is not surprising that AT&T is a large client of IBM. Their cultures completely align.
All the companies you mentioned did not have the trillions of the Mag7, they did not even have the weight on the indices that the Mag7 have, so in proportion they were technology companies and perhaps even giants, but they were not these global conglomerates that the Mag7 are today. The gap today is wider than ever, there is a gap between the Mag7 and the others, so I feel like saying that the Mag7 have already won. Oracle, Intel, AMD, IBM, have great resonance and are companies of great impact, but they do not have the solid foundations, the fundamentals, the liquidity, the narrative of the Mag7, so I see it unlikely that they will be able to establish themselves, let alone smaller players. Anthropic, OpenAI, they're cool, but will they still exist in 10 years? Maybe. Microsoft, Apple, Meta, Nvidia, Amazon and Google? For me, obviously yes. Tesla? Well if not with machines, with X, xAI and SpaceX, the man behind Tesla is far from disappearing and in 10 years he will still be there.
People in 1980 couldn't comprehend 1 trillion dollar companies. IBM was the biggest company by market cap at 34 billion. Today Nvidia is over 100x bigger.
Yes. Consider that 40 years ago the most valuable company was IBM worth $96B or 2% of current Nvidia. The dollar inflates. It has lost 99.99% of its value in the last century
Ollivetti Computers, NCR, Comcast dabbled with IBM so on
Quantum is the future but not IONQ Google, IBM, Microsoft are
lol ATT outsources so much of their development to IBM! ATT pretty much has IBM do all their development for Digital now. Back in 2020 they basically sold out an entire department to IBM, all these FTEs lost their job and became IBM contractors. They were then let go from IBM after a promised 1 year employment. They also took 5 years to “modernize” their business portal when it was supposed to be a two year plan, and they still gave up half way through only to have migrated the billing portion and nothing for the manage portion. They used to joke about how this migration took longer than a worldwide pandemic. And it was still never finished. Even Directors used to joke about losing their jobs because this was all going so bad. Guess what, all these Directors are still there lol. Even the AVP responsible it all. Then after this fail, the past 3 years they have been trying to converge all of their stuff into a single site, wireline and wireless, but can’t even figure out how to get different site logins to work with a single sign in page. They also reorg twice a year for the sake or reorganizing. Constantly changing their teams around. Every time employees are worried about losing their jobs. They just let go of select individuals with tenure and pensions in their latest round of surplus so that they could hire cheaper employees right out of college. Stankey said it himself, no more loyalty in business. I feel bad for the employees in such a toxic environment. And also bad for their customers, especially their enterprise customers who can’t even get billing reports on time to reconcile their charges. If you have been in telecom manager at a large company that uses ATT, you know what I’m talking about.
Toxic company that hates their employees almost as much as they hate their customers. Leadership has missed every telecom transformation in the last 50 years. Their M&A strategy is basically used as an executive bonus structure. One CEO buys something and the next CEO spins it off and lines their pockets with cash. AT&T could be considered the dumbest company in the world if IBM didn’t exist.
This is why IBM is not among the Mag7 and is an obsolete company compared to them.
IBM doesn’t even stand for anything it just sounds professional
This bubble is just now getting started, go back and look at IBM and GE and see how many years they were on top
If anyone is going to get to quantum computing, it's going to be etheir Google (most likely) Microsoft (significantly less likely) or IBM (least likely but still possible)
I’m not talking about fundamentals and this ticker is the very definition of bagholders pumping bullshit. NFE, to give an example, is a trash stock but at least it has a government contract. To say that anyone spotted a squeeze in the data 3 months ago is disingenuous if you understand how this ticker has been marketed with AI slop PR over the last week. It’s just a coincidence. Don’t get me wrong, I made just under $80k on this play and it made my week, but pitching it as a true squeeze vs something like BYND or the old VW/IBM squeezes is as incorrect as it gets. There are unsavvy people reading this thread that are going to be holding very heavy bags.
Huh, well shit. Stanford might've just set off the real quantum race, they figured out room temp entanglement. Quantum computers themselves still have to be supercooled, but this means the wires connecting them won't have to be, which knocks out one of the major quantum hurdles (quantum networking). Instead of one big-ass supercooled chip we can have a bunch of smaller chips distributing the workloads, this makes everything way smaller, cheaper, and more energy efficient. Big news for GOOGL/IBM, and I'm sure all the scammy ones will pop too
There's a variation on selling early that's cost me a lot. Buy at a nice low price, thesis is simply that stock or sector is out of favor for any one of a number of reasons that happen all the time. Stock shows some sign of life, fails at prior highs and falls back to around where you bought it. You go, welp, I guess not. And sell it. Some time later (varies, could be short amount of time, or a year), finally catches a bid, has good results, breaks out, doubles your price. Recent examples: WMT, IBM, both bought in the, 120's failed in the 140s, now both over 300 split adjusted.
Except there's a reason Kodak is a poster child for lack of innovation (just like IBM). Companies absolutely have to invest in new product lines if their core line is in danger of dying. And they have to give those lines a chance to succeed instead through reinvestment.
LOL because people like the CEO of IBM is an idiot.
IBM pre dated MicroSoft, Oracle, NVDIA, Palantir, Apple , Meta by nearly 50 years and basically barely grew and never became a dominant company, I think that it telling that their management team is anything but visionary
true but you can see trends like that much easier now and when a company is no longer growth oriented is evident after a few years. Most top tech companies that got superceded had that happen during technological innovations they couldn't adopt to. IBM couldn't switch from servers for enterprise to individual computers for regular people. Kodak couldn't adapt out of film. GE and Boeing stopped emphasis on innovation and engineering. Blackberry with the Smart phone. Technology creates new markets and those get flooded with new companies. Yet look at latest technologies. Biggest innovations lately after the smart phone has been cloud computing and now AI. Hasn't really changed the top companies so far. But point is now top companies are so over excited to jump on latest tech trends that while they might be wasteful and annoying it makes them much harder to overcome. And even if new companies do then with a large cap growth ETF they'll naturally drop lower in % holdings as new companies join and gain share.
> anecdotal it’s less good than others. you are right. But Google thinks they can scream louder and people will believe they are good. This strategy is not going to work. > I basically stopped using google search bc we have ChatGPT It's not just about chatgpt anymore. the fact is we can't trust Google It is intentionally leading us to not the subpar website for our intent. > gpu: have no real competitive edge here over aws/microsoft. You're right and they're not trying to compete with AWS or Microsoft They have a different market share a market share of machine learning, big data, and Android apps. They can't take customers from AWS or Microsoft. > it seems like they are totally screwed. This is true. they are screwed. They will not die, they will just get humble, just like IBM. But they will definitely win losses for many years to come from now. Their era of King of the Internet is over and their stock price will reflect that very soon. they cannot cosmetically concealed that for very long.
PLTR has a 50% higher market cap than IBM, with less than 10% of the earnings.
Funny thing is, it will probably come from IBM or GOOG rather than RGTI or the other companies
IBM...weren't they relevant 30 years ago? I wonder how America Online feels about AI data centers.
How is IBM still relevant, what do they do?
I would say all you listed although I think it will be a few days before some of the weird news gets clarified with MSFT. Regardless, the big boys will endure & add NVDA, CSCO & IBM to your list. Other don’t sells… TSM, ASML & AAPL.
IBM now trying to figure out how to put ai into their quantum typewriters
IBM did exactly that. They refused to modernize the company for decades and kept leaning on their mainframes, after they screwed their PC market opportunities, hence why the company is mostly out of the picture today. They fumbled the PC market by not securing exclusivity clauses with Intel and Microsoft, allowing other companies to reverse engineer their bios and release their own PCs with the windows OS and x86 Intel chips for a fraction of the cost. IBM literally handed Microsoft perpetual dominance in operating systems, and did the same for Intel with the x86 architecture, both being the only widely supported platform to this day, while destroying their own opportunities. I agree with their take on the infrastructure costs of AI, and at one point or another, depreciation will crush some of these companies, and capital will get pulled out from underneath the startups, but that’s not to say that IBM is a well managed company. IBM should be part of the big tech world, but they aren’t because management screwed themselves over horrendously. They still live today because of their former dominance giving them a strong cushion, not because they’ve made particularly great decisions or navigated hurdles well.
Mainframe is not a growth sector you're right but its not fading. The same people buy it and use it every cycle because there is nothing that can compete for that workload, and everyone has given up trying because its IBMs specialty. Quantum has progressed significantly and IBM has met every milestone they've set out to meet. Is quantum some AI style growth vertical... no. That doesn't mean they aren't a leader in the field, delivering on their goals, and advancing quantum computing. It has a niche and will fill it. The last 5 years has been good to the stock. They aren't going to be Nvidia but they will continue to grind away.
You're right. IBM has been around for a long time and they're not a garbage company, But they went from one of the top dogs in the S&p 500 in the 2000s to an also ran. Technology is just that disruptive that is easy to fall behind.
IBM have been around 114 years. They know better than any anyone never to put all your eggs in one basket.
That’s cute and all but IBM is a dead dinosaur for a reason.
I do really believe IBM still working on projects from the 90's. This statement is definitely NOT how someone would justify being behind in this game
Their quantum business was the first thing that came to mind. These large business separate their stable money makers (for IBM its low level software, mainframe and some other proprietary HW in compute) from their moon shots(quantum/watson). It’s not guaranteed to generate money at the moment, but it puts whoever is highly invested at the front gate for whatever the next wave can be. So while AI infrastructure seems costly now, whatever company owns it will be able to capitalize greatly IF there is a huge turn towards something that depends on it at that scale. It’s a gamble like any other moon shots investment.
If IBM knew what they were talking about they would be in the Mag7. They missed the boat and now they're watching from the shore with binoculars. Bottom line I trust the CEOs of meta, google, Amazon Microsoft and Nvidia know what they're doing more than the CEO of IBM
Coming from IBM? They haven't exactly been the land of innovation for 4+ decades.
Its my take based on direct experience... I worked at IBM during the transition from Sam Palmisano to Ginni Rometty and the first couple years of her leadership. IBM consistently missed the boat. They were constantly trying to play catch up by acquiring "also-rans" in the sectors they missed. And they have failed to capitalize on trends they were supposed leaders in... such as AI (I was there when Watson was getting its initial push for commercialization and it was a complete failure). Mainframe is a fading sector. It keeps the lights on but it is not growth. And the company knows this and has been trying to grow beyond it for decades at this point.
Considering that IBM was the leader in AI decades ago, pretty interesting they completely missed the boat.
Some of IBM’s businesses will be at risk when all the ai datacenters are being sold for pennies on the dollar.
You would have made more money investing in IBM than META this year… and last
IBM CEO's have form regarding predictions. In the early 1940s, IBM's president, Thomas J Watson, reputedly said: "I think there is a world market for about five computers."