By Danilo Masoni

MILAN, Jan 21 (Reuters) – Shares in Germany’s SAP extended a months-long downtrend on Wednesday, falling to their lowest ​since August 2024 and bringing the loss in market value ‌since last year’s record high to around $130 billion.

The decline is part of a broader ‌selloff that has hit software stocks in Europe and on Wall Street on the back of growing fears of AI disruption, even though most analysts remain upbeat on Europe’s largest software group.

By 1334 GMT, the ⁠stock was down 2.4% in ‌Frankfurt, valuing SAP at about 233 billion euros ($273 billion), compared with 344 billion euros at its lifetime high ‍in February 2025. “Some of the concerns in the market are justified, not about the company’s existential future, but about the value of its services,” said ​Banor SIM portfolio manager Angelo Meda, adding that it was crucial ‌for SAP to accelerate its cloud transition.

“With AI, many modules can become easier to develop and replicate, so the risk is that the average selling price of services and billable hours falls,” he added.

SAP in October forecast full-year cloud revenue at the lower end of its ⁠outlook range, though operating profit was expected ​toward the upper end. The company reports ​results next week. “Software sentiment has rarely been lower,” Jefferies analyst Brent Thill wrote in a note on Monday, adding ‍that SAP’s valuation ⁠was now approaching its historical trough.

One Frankfurt‑based trader said some clients were taking long positions ahead of next week’s results, but ⁠added that charts were still flashing fresh “sell signals”. The S&P 500 software index ‌has lost 7.2% so far in 2026.

($1 = 0.8522 euros)

(Reporting by ‌Danilo Masoni; Editing by Amanda Cooper)