
After a choppy year for enterprise software, Salesforce (NYSE: CRM) is suddenly wearing a new label: value stock.
With shares drifting near 52-week lows and valuation multiples compressing to levels rarely seen in its two-decade run, Wall Street is buzzing about a potential bargain.
But in a market obsessed with immediate AI returns, “cheap” on paper doesn’t always mean it’s time to buy.
As the company prepares to report earnings, investors are asking if this is a golden entry point or a value trap. Here is what’s really going on.
Salesforce stock: What “historically cheap” really means
When analysts call Salesforce “cheap,” they are looking at a stark disconnect between its price and its profits.
Salesforce is currently trading at a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of roughly 19.6x, a massive discount compared to its own five-year average, which often hovered above 40x or even 50x during peak growth phases.
For context, a sub-20x multiple is typically reserved for slow-growing utilities, not tech titans that dominate their sector.
The discount is even clearer when measured against peers.
Even the broader tech sector average sits closer to 32x. Why the gap? The market is punishing Salesforce for a perceived “growth purgatory.”
Investors are worried that the core CRM business is saturating while the new AI pivot, specifically the “Agentforce” platform, hasn’t yet shown up meaningfully in the revenue column.
The stock’s slide to the $220–$230 range reflects a “show-me” attitude from Wall Street: the valuation is depressed because the market isn’t convinced double-digit growth is coming back anytime soon.
Catalysts vs. risks: The “Agentforce” gamble
The bullish case for buying now rests almost entirely on Agentforce, Salesforce’s new autonomous AI platform. If this product succeeds, it triggers a massive re-rating.
The bull case: Analysts at Oppenheimer recently maintained an “Outperform” rating with a $300 price target, arguing that Salesforce is a long-term AI winner with a “perfect” financial health score.
The catalyst here is the transition from simply organizing customer data to acting on it autonomously. If Salesforce can upsell its massive install base to $2-per-conversation AI agents, margins and revenue could expand significantly.
Additionally, with a 6% free cash flow yield, the company has plenty of cash to buy back cheap stock or make strategic moves.
The bear case: The risk is execution. Early data shows adoption is lagging innovation; reports suggest only about 8% of customers have adopted Agentforce so far.
If AI spending continues to flow to hardware (Nvidia) rather than software applications, Salesforce’s “cheap” valuation could act as a ceiling, not a floor.
Furthermore, macro headwinds, like hesitant enterprise IT spending, could lead to lackluster guidance in the near term.
Salesforce is undeniably cheap by historical standards, but it is cheap for a reason: it is a company in transition.
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