Shares of Salesforce (CRM) recently caught investors’ attention after the cloud software giant unveiled a massive capital allocation move that could become a key catalyst for the stock. The company priced a $25 billion senior notes offering, its largest-ever debt issuance, with the proceeds earmarked for an accelerated share repurchase program aimed at returning capital to shareholders.
The announcement triggered a notable bounce in Salesforce stock, as investors interpreted the move as a signal that management sees the shares as undervalued and is willing to aggressively reduce the share count. Also, the debt-funded buyback ties into Salesforce’s broader $50 billion repurchase authorization, positioning the company to meaningfully boost earnings per share through financial engineering while reinforcing shareholder returns.
With Salesforce leaning into buybacks at scale, the $25 billion financing move could act as a powerful near-term catalyst, making the stock a wise investment.
Salesforce is a leading global provider of cloud-based customer relationship management software, headquartered in the iconic Salesforce Tower in San Francisco, California.
Salesforce’s market cap stands at $180.3 billion, reflecting its status as one of the most valuable enterprise software companies globally. With its comprehensive platform, innovative technology, and scalable business model, Salesforce remains at the forefront of enterprise digital transformation.
Shares of Salesforce have experienced a challenging stretch over the past year, with the stock underperforming many technology peers despite the company’s strong position in enterprise software. CRM shares have been under pressure in 2026, reflecting investor concerns around slowing enterprise spending and a broader rotation away from high-multiple software names.
Year-to-date (YTD), Salesforce stock has declined around 26.4%, extending a broader pullback. Over the past 52 weeks, the stock has fallen from a high of $296.05, reached in May 2025, to closing the last session at $195.31. The slump has largely been tied to cautious guidance and a perception that Salesforce’s growth has moderated compared with earlier cloud-computing boom years. The stock is down 30% over the past year.
