Software stocks had one of their strongest weekly rallies in decades, helping flip a previously lagging segment of the market into one of the standout performers. The iShares Expanded Tech-Software ETF (IGV) surged roughly 14% over the week, marking its best stretch in more than 25 years and outpacing semiconductors, which rose about 7.5% over the same period
Despite the powerful rebound, major indices still show a fragmented recovery beneath the surface. While some names have ripped higher off oversold conditions, others remain well below prior highs, suggesting the rally is more of a re-rating phase than a full reset in sentiment.
The strongest gains came from a mix of cloud infrastructure, enterprise software, and AI-adjacent platforms, with several names posting double-digit moves in a matter of days. The rebound also reflected renewed risk appetite as macro conditions stabilized and traders rotated back into growth.
The Movers:
- Oracle (ORCL) +25% – Oracle surged after renewed momentum in its cloud and AI infrastructure positioning, with investors rotating back into large-cap enterprise software. The move also reflected technical strength as the stock rebounded from deeply oversold conditions and reclaimed key support levels.
- RingCentral (RNG) +15% – RingCentral climbed as investors reassessed valuations across unified communications software following months of pressure. The rebound was driven by improved sentiment toward subscription-based enterprise models and broader sector rotation.
- Datadog (DDOG) +15% – Datadog advanced on renewed enthusiasm for observability and cloud monitoring demand tied to AI infrastructure expansion. The move extended a multi-session recovery as growth software regained momentum leadership.
- Snowflake (SNOW) +15% – Snowflake rallied on improving sentiment around cloud data warehousing demand and AI-related workloads. However, despite the surge, the stock remains below prior highs, highlighting how far it still has to recover.
- Shopify (SHOP) +15% – Shopify gained as investors rotated back into e-commerce software following easing macro concerns. The rally was supported by expectations of stabilizing consumer demand and improved merchant activity trends.
Big Tech software remains strong, but still below its highs
Even as the group surged, leadership within mega-cap software tells a more cautious story. Microsoft posted its strongest weekly performance since the 2020 pandemic recovery phase, but remains well off its all-time highs. Salesforce, ServiceNow, and HubSpot also remain below peak levels despite the recent rebound. Market analysts have noted that this divergence is typical in early-stage recoveries, where momentum returns first, but full valuation repair lags.
Technical rebound signals improving momentum, not full recovery
Across the broader software universe, technical indicators are beginning to turn more constructive after deeply oversold conditions. Several stocks are attempting to reclaim long-term moving averages, while momentum gauges like RSI and MACD are stabilizing from extreme lows.
However, strategists continue to emphasize that the rebound may still be forming a base rather than confirming a new sustained uptrend. In several cases, stocks remain in long-term corrective structures despite the sharp bounce. Key technical takeaways include improving breadth within software, early signs of double-bottom formations in select leaders, and persistent resistance at prior breakdown levels that still need to be reclaimed for confirmation.
Rotation back into growth, but dispersion remains high
The recent rally has also been driven by broader risk-on flows, with investors re-entering high-beta growth names as macro uncertainty eased. However, dispersion within the sector remains unusually wide, with winners and laggards separating quickly even within the same subsector.
Some cloud and AI-linked names are leading decisively, while others tied to legacy enterprise spending or slower growth profiles continue to lag. This uneven participation suggests that investors are becoming more selective rather than broadly bullish on software as a whole.
Looking Ahead
The key question now is whether software can transition from a sharp, short-covering rally into a sustained trend supported by earnings and fundamentals. With macro conditions stabilizing and AI-related demand still a central theme, the sector has room to extend its rebound if leadership holds. But the incomplete recovery across many major names suggests caution is still warranted. For now, software looks less like a fully repaired trade and more like a market trying to rebuild conviction one breakout at a time.


