r/stocks May 2, 10:43 PM
Everyone's shorting or avoiding SaaS because of AI BUT I think PEGA could print So I've been trying to figure out which SaaS companies are actually going to survive the AI agent "apocalypse" and I keep coming back to Pegasystems... hear me out.
The basic SaaS fear is simple basically AI agents let one person do the work of five people, so companies won't buy five software seats anymore. They'll buy one. Revenue dies, multiples compress, SaaS stocks crater. We already saw this play out when the whole sector got destroyed earlier this year and most SaaS stocks havnt recovered PEGA included.
But here's what's interesting to me about PEGA. They're not a point solution that ChatGPT or claude etc can replace. They do workflow automation for complicated enterprise stuff like customer service, claims processing, and sales operations. The kind of work where if you screw up, actual money gets lost or you end up in regulatory trouble. Their whole pitch is basically that they are the control plane that lets AI agents actually work together across different enterprise systems without everything breaking.
They reported Q1/26 earnings a couple weeks ago andddd the numbers did looked terrible. Revenue down almost ten percent yoy, missed on both lines, and the stock got hammered. But their cloud business is kind of ripping. Pega Cloud ACV grew twenty nine percent to over nine hundred million dollars, and free cash flow in Q1 was two hundred seven million dollars. They're on track to hit five hundred seventy five million for the full year, basically double what they were doing a couple years ago. They bought back three and a half million shares and returned over eighty percent of free cash flow to shareholders.
The headline numbers look bad because well they are bad but they're transitioning from legacy perpetual licenses to cloud subscriptions, so you get an accounting mess where revenue looks like it's declining even though the underlying business is growing. Same thing that happened to Adobe and Autodesk during their transitions. Market cap is around ten billion, and they're trading at something like six times forward free cash flow. That's pricing in permanent stagnation for a business that just grew cloud bookings at thirty percent.
Now for the AI angle. Everyone assumes AI kills SaaS, and for a lot of companies that's true re:Chegg. But PEGA is building the infrastructure that lets AI agents execute real business processes in a governed, auditable way. Their CEO keeps talking about how enterprises are moving from AI experimentation to ROI-driven deployment, and that's exactly when you need a platform that prevents your AI agents from going rogue ie that company that went full silicon value last week I forget the name. Anyway they're not selling per-seat licenses for workflows AI can automate away. They're selling the orchestration layer that makes AI agents useful and AI that has an ROI is where the money is going to go.
The way I see it, there are two types of SaaS companies right now. The ones selling per-seat licenses for workf