Motley Fool Money - Did Anthropic Just Give Investors Another “DeepSeek Moment?”
Episode Date: February 5, 2026Software stocks are dropping like rocks in 2026 as AI companies, including Anthropic, deliver more impressive enterprise tools. It’s reminiscent of the market’s reaction to DeepSeek in 2025 – a ...Chinese startup that seemed like it could deliver the same AI capabilities with a fraction of the hardware requirements. This “DeepSeek Moment” caused investors to rethink their assumptions. The rapid rise of enterprise AI tools appears to have investors rethinking things again. Tyler Crowe, Matt Frankel, and Jon Quast discuss: - Which stocks may be more safe - Sudden shifts in the job market - How the economy impacts our investing - Stocks on our radar Companies discussed: CRWD, TOST, UPS, AMZN, POWL, ZS, GDDY Host: Tyler Crowe Guests: Matt Frankel, Jon Quast Engineer: Dan Boyd Disclosure: Advertisements are sponsored content and provided for informational purposes only. The Motley Fool and its affiliates (collectively, “TMF”) do not endorse, recommend, or verify the accuracy or completeness of the statements made within advertisements. TMF is not involved in the offer, sale, or solicitation of any securities advertised herein and makes no representations regarding the suitability, or risks associated with any investment opportunity presented. Investors should conduct their own due diligence and consult with legal, tax, and financial advisors before making any investment decisions. TMF assumes no responsibility for any losses or damages arising from this advertisement. We’re committed to transparency: All personal opinions in advertisements from Fools are their own. The product advertised in this episode was loaned to TMF and was returned after a test period or the product advertised in this episode was purchased by TMF. Advertiser has paid for the sponsorship of this episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Software companies, terrible, no good, very bad day.
This is Motley Fool Money.
Welcome to Motley Full Money.
My name's Tyler Grow, and today I'm joined by longtime contributors, Matt Frankel and John Quest.
Guys, sometimes decades happen and nothing happens, and sometimes decades happen in a month.
Yes, I'm using a Lenin quote on an investing podcast, but it really does feel like that this week because it has been a busy one.
We're going to talk about jobs numbers.
We may make a couple cracks at Google's earnings and their stock going down today.
But we're going to start with software companies, especially like SaaS companies and a lot of
things that's been going on in that space recently.
It was right around this time last year when we were talking about AI having this deep seat moment.
Investors were terrified that a Chinese company had built some impressive AI algorithms that
kind of ran on commodity hardware and were much more efficient than some of the AI models that we
were seeing from like Open AI.
Well, this week, software companies, I think, had what we could call their Anthropic moment.
That's when AI company Anthropic launched Claude Co-work. It's a AI tool designed to replace many software tools on the market today.
And just to give us some examples of the software companies that were reeling from this, over the past week, shares of Shopify are down 23%, Monday.com and Fastly are down 15%.
Bill Holdings, down 16%. And this is all as we're recording today. I could keep going.
the list is long. And this is just kind of a brief encapsulation of what we've seen at a lot of software and SaaS companies in the last few weeks and months.
So I want to put this to both of you. With the deep seek moment that we had like last year, it seemed to have passed.
AI spending is exploding and meta, alphabet, all these companies are full steam ahead and there's as many issues as we thought about a year ago.
Will this anthropic moment for software, like, have a similar result, or are there deeper concerns for these companies?
First of all, Tyler, I love the Lenin quote you pulled out because I feel like New Year's Day was seven months ago, and it was like one month ago.
And it just, time is like, we're in like a very slow time period right now.
But yeah, the answer to your question is it depends if this is another deep seek moment or not.
And I really think the risk here varies based on the type of software company we're talking about.
In some ways, it could be an overreaction, in some ways it could be legitimate concerns.
So I think of software stocks in kind of three baskets, I guess I'd say.
One, there's the massive and deep-pocketed software leaders.
Think like Microsoft in that case.
They're not going anywhere.
Then there are what I call the ecosystem companies, the ones that are kind of mission-critical for their customers
and are just so rooted into their customers' business, Shopify is a great example of that
from the stocks that you just mentioned.
And then there are the software companies that essentially do one thing.
Sometimes they do it really well, but essentially perform one function for a business,
that not only the business would be fine without, but if, you know, that Claude Co-Work
could make an AI-driven alternative, they wouldn't feel any difference.
And not that these companies are going to go away or anything, but like HubSpot and Atlassian,
Those are down way off the highs.
Those are two examples I'd put in that third basket.
Now, I don't think AI is going to completely destroy any of them.
As earnings trickle out over the next couple weeks, we're going to get some really valuable
insights from CEOs who are almost guaranteed to get questions about all this in their conference
calls.
But my general feeling is that the more mission critical a software company is to its customers,
and the more different things that it does, the better off that it's going to be in this
Anthropic moment, as you put it.
Yeah, this anthropic moment is really fascinating because on the one hand, this is what everyone
has been saying all along, ever since AI really started to take hold of the headlines
that it was going to replace certain softwares.
And so we've been expecting this, but on the other hand, everyone's acting surprised.
Now, in the comparison to Deepseek, I'm not certain that the Deepseek moment is,
is fully over. What DeepSeek showed us is that it's possible maybe to do more with less when it comes
to the AI hardware. And I would say when you look at the bottlenecks in this industry,
it's all physical. There's a lot of physical bottlenecks. And I think that that points to a
continuation of we need to learn how to do more in AI with less physical components. So I don't
think that that trend has fully played out. I think the panic, initial
panic, that was what the market was down by, and it's like, oh, it didn't collapse overnight.
I think we might see something similar here with Anthropic. The general trend is pointing
towards what Matt said. There is going to be software that is replaced by AI. I think that we
saw Anthropic come out with its new products. This is the initial panic to that. I think in
coming months and quarters, we're going to see, okay, it's not a overnight collapse, but I think
the general trend is pointing that direction. And I think that that is why, as Matt said,
it's so important to distinguish what software can't we do without? We're going to still go to
the software provider and what is AI going to replace? Yeah, I find myself landing in a very similar place,
you know, the mission critical versus the relatively easy switching costs. You know, when I think
of mission critical, I think like banking software, you know, fifth serve fidelity national
Jack Henry or kind of companies that I don't really see.
getting affected by AI nearly as much as just to get, I'm not going to name any names here,
but like working here at the full of past ever years, we've swapped out like productivity SaaS
vendors like two to three times. And life seems to have gone on with relatively not a whole lot of bumps
in the road. And so I with that in mind, I'm going to, I mentioned FISERFidelity National Jack Henry.
I want to put you two on the spot here. I want you to highlight one stock in the software industry
where you're not nearly worried about AI disruption.
For me, that is CrowdStrike, ticker symbol CRWD.
This is a cloud-based AI cybersecurity company.
I don't think that this is a business that you want to have some internal tech geniuses
vibe coding a cybersecurity product to replace it.
I don't see that happening.
Businesses need cybersecurity.
The threats are always increasing.
And look, CrowdStrike is a fast-growing, hugely profitable.
business. It does have plenty of resources at its disposal to defend itself. And if you look,
shares are flat over the past year, down 25% from 52-week high, maybe still a little bit pricey
from a valuation perspective. But if this SaaS sell-off intensifies, maybe 2026 will hand
investors a very good bargain for Crowdstrike stock. Yeah, I love the cybersecurity space here.
I like that you brought that up. The one I was going to highlight is toast, T-O-S-T. It just had
52-week low today, and it's kind of ridiculous that it's sold off so much. It's a business
that is so entrenched in its customers' businesses. It provides an entire restaurant ecosystem,
payroll, ordering, delivery, payments, mobile apps. Many other things that restaurants have historically
had to pay dozens of different vendors for, a lot of those are, you know, they're not
disruptable by just coding. I mean, you're not going to, like, code a new delivery platform
that's that ingrained in a business.
You're just not, so I just don't see each of the things it does come, like, all together
as being completely disruptable.
I think that's one that people shouldn't have to worry about.
Yeah, I think we got some really good ideas here.
And coming up after the break, we're going to talk about maybe some not great news as well.
We're going to talk about job productivity and current job numbers after the break.
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Unfortunately, today is not the most positive newsday for this podcast because we got some jobs numbers that were, to quote one of my favorite 1990s movies, office space.
Not great, Bob. Job openings were the lowest since 2020 and announced layoffs.
were the highest since January of 2000, well, January high layoff numbers were the highest since we saw in
January of 2009. Now, I don't know about you, but I'm kind of struggling to put these numbers in perspective
because thinking about the past five or six years of hiring and firing trends, we had some massive
hiring rounds in 2021, 2022, just kind of as we were coming out of COVID. And even though some
companies admitted they may have overshot their needs for labor, they were hesitant to lay off,
because of various reasons.
So I'm struggling with this concept.
Is this just part of the natural ups and downs of the hiring cycle where we overshot early
and now we're correcting?
Is this related to AI productivity that we were just talking about?
I'm really of many minds on this topic.
And I'd love to get your guys as input because I haven't come down on one side or the other.
I think yes and yes, Tyler.
So you look at some of the places where jobs are pretty good.
So healthcare looks like it's still generally adding some workers, leisure and hospitality,
not doing bad, but where we are seeing decreases is right where you expect them to be,
and that is entry-level tech jobs.
I think that AI does have something to do with that, for sure.
But I do think that some perspective is important here.
So unemployment rates remain well within the historical average for the last 20 years,
and so I don't want to make light of anyone losing their job,
and I don't want to just wave my hands at the significant spike in layoffs in January,
but nothing yet screams to me that the economy,
me is in trouble, it would take a few more months like January for me to really start to say,
okay, there's a trend that we really need to pay attention to here.
I know that I'm definitely, especially out of me and Tyler, I know I'm the glasses half-full
type of guy. But if we're going to see elevated layoffs here, it's more common in the first
quarter, although this is still a pretty high number. You know, companies, you know, anticipate the
needs for the busy holiday quarter and then in the first quarter, you know, there's just that trend.
And although the headline number of about 108,000 announced layoffs sounds like a lot, and it is.
A lot of it is single company announcements.
It just, not just an AI.
John correctly mentioned that a lot of this is entry-level tech jobs, but UPS announced over 30,000 layoffs.
That was included in that 108,000 number.
Amazon announced 16,000, which is some of the entry-level tech jobs.
But a lot of it is single company.
Between those two, that's almost half of that big headline number.
So, not that the news isn't scary, but it is important to add context like this to it.
Some of the job reduction seem to be natural, like companies focusing more on efficiency.
Some definitely seems to be AI-driven, and not just because of AI fears, but because companies
are ramping up spending an AI infrastructure and have to get the money to pay for it somewhere.
But I do agree with John, one month's job data does not frighten me.
But if this trend continues, that could change.
Yeah, to your point of the UPS numbers, I think that's also expected to because they have
been trying to wind down their e-commerce delivery a little bit much to focus on small, medium
business, healthcare stuff, a little bit more value over volume.
So that one kind of comes in line with what UPS has been thinking about wanting to do.
So, guys, we're a podcast from the Motley Fool and some of the core tenants of our investing
philosophy here at the Motley Fool is to buy companies a little long term and not let a lot of
short-term thing or two, kind of really lead to rash decisions. But, you know, as investors,
and when we're making our decisions, what to you guys constitutes enough bad news to alter your thesis?
You know, take these job numbers. What kind of trend in macro numbers would you need to see to either
one drastically alter your current investment in something or when you have, you know,
wanting to put new money into an investment? Yeah, it's a good question, Tyler. I think it would have
to be case-by-case. As fools, I think that there's good reason to be perennially optimistic about
the stock market in general. And so we are very, almost 100% of the time, if not 100%, we are looking
for what can we invest in today? What's a good opportunity right now? But individual stocks,
I could flip to bearish on some economic data. It's possible. I try to build an investment
thesis that takes into account that the economy does regularly go up and it does regularly contract,
And so I want to build an investment thesis that looks through the economic cycles and isn't going to break just because the economy goes through its normal contractions or its normal slowdowns.
But it is possible that I would build a thesis that is a little bit more dependent on the economy.
I hate to single out a single company by name, but I think a company like Polaris, this is ticker symbol PII.
They make four-wheelers and stuff like that.
Listen, it can struggle in a recession.
This is a company that is dependent on product sales.
It really requires a strong consumer with plenty of discretionary income.
There is a scenario where this net debt company could go through a prolonged economic downturn and really, really struggle.
But there is a scenario where Polaris could be a very cheap stock.
Maybe we're towards the bottom of the economic cycle, and maybe I could make a case for investing in it at that time for the next three years or something like that is the economy.
economy heats up, but normally I would build an investment thesis that is not dependent on an economic
cycle.
Yeah, I'll almost never stop investing entirely because of any type of macro concerns. I mean,
even during the initial COVID crash, when the sky was falling, Tyler and I lost hours
of productivity, just kind of game planning what stocks we wanted to buy. But depending on the
nature of the bad news, I can alter my investment focus. And that's what we did back then.
So, for example, if jobs data stays this bad for several more months, I might stop putting
money into some of the cyclical areas like banking, where even though I like some of the
businesses there a lot and focus on more evergreen industries, like, say, insurance, because
no matter what the jobs market's doing, people still need to pay their car insurance and
things like that. In a speculative sell-off, I like to consider, like, that's what I consider
the current software sell-off to be. I use it as a time to selectively look for opportunities,
kind of like we discussed in the first segment. So I will start paying close attention to company
earnings reports. I will say when macro data is banned, just to take a little bit of an extra
microscope and see where cracks are forming. But I don't stop investing.
Matt, I think you and I would be embarrassed to tell our wives how much we were looking at
debt confidence of tangor during the COVID breakdown. So, yes, I can fully attest to some of the
things that Matt's talking about. And speaking of crazy stocks and looking at debt covenants,
After the break, we're going to do stocks on our radar.
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are here. We kind of joked last week when we were discussing meta that it was like a freaky Friday
moment. Third quarter, they reported they were going to spend a ton of money. The stock dropped.
And then this quarter, they said they're going to spend a ton of money. And then the stock popped.
And we were kind of joking. It was the opposite of what happened at Alphabet in the third quarter.
And guess what? This most recent quarter, they announced today. They announced massive capital
spending. And I think this stock is about 3% or 4% as we're recording today. So another freaky Friday.
at any moment, insert whatever investing trope that you have about Mr. Market or be greedy when
it's fearful. There's a whole bunch. Pick your favorite one and add it right there. So for stocks
on the radar, I'm going to go first today. And the one that I've been looking at is Powell Industries.
Now, I've been known to pick sleepy businesses from time to time. And most of the time, Powell Industries,
I almost forgot the ticker, P-O-W-L, that would fall into that basket of those sleepy businesses.
circuit breakers, switchbacks, and other electrical equipment for industrial or municipal facilities,
AI data centers maybe, LNGX, port terminals, you know, the big stuff.
But man, was their most recent earnings, anything but sleepy.
Net new orders for the most recent quarter were up 63% compared to this time last year.
It's booked to bill ratio, which basically means the amount of orders that it brought in
versus the amount that they sent out the door as completed equipment was 1.7 times,
which means way more stuff's coming in than out the door.
I wouldn't even call Powell Industries like a picks and shovels investment in AI infrastructure.
This is like the blacksmith making the steel components of the picks and shovels to make them to sell them.
Companies like Powell, and this is actually to, John, I think it was your statement on kind of those bottlenecks in AI infrastructure,
that physical stuff and needing to find those efficiencies, companies like Powell are going to be
where the pain points of AI buildout are going to happen, these relatively smaller companies
that are facing massive demand for things that are often a much more sleepy business. I think
the companies that are able to meet that growing demand are going to do spectacularly well in the
coming years. And certainly based on the quarterly numbers at Powell, there's an opportunity for
them to make that happen. Matt, you go next.
Yeah, so I'm going to kind of piggyback on what John mentioned earlier, because I think
cybersecurity is such a great call in the current environment. I'm going to go with Z-scaler,
though, ZS. They provide secure access to all their two enterprises, apps, their data.
And in full disclosure, I used three different apps provided by the Motley Fool today, and I logged
in once. It was super easy. I got into all of them. The stock just hit a 52-week low. The
surge in AI technology that we've been kind of talking about is going to increase the need
for cybersecurity, not decrease it. And it's going to be a growing market for years to come.
And I just can't say enough good things about how great of an opportunity I see in cybersecurity
right now.
And I'm going to go with GoDaddy, ticker symbol GDDY. This business is not new. It's a company
that allows you to buy a domain name, host a website, and implement some e-commerce tools.
There are aspects of this business that I do think would be replaceable with AI in theory,
particularly the e-commerce tools, but then there are other aspects of the business that really
aren't.
And so, for example, web hosting, GoDaddy provides its own web hosting with its own data centers.
There's something physical here.
It's not just software.
And so that does give GoDaddy something defensible, in my opinion.
You look at the business growing by double digits.
It's getting more profitable as it's.
embraced AI in its own workflows. And now it trades it just nine times its forward earnings.
That looks really just too cheap for me. It just repurchased $1.4 billion in its own shares to the
first three quarters of the year, which is good for more than 10% of its market cap right now.
I think this business is important. It's profitable. And the stock is darn cheap right now.
That gives us GoDaddy, Z scaler, Powell Industries. And we go back through the episode.
I think there was a lot more companies that we mentioned along the way.
As always, people on the program may have interests in the stocks they talk about, and the
Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against. So don't buy or sell stocks based
solely on what you hear. All personal finance content follows Motley Fool editorial standards,
and is not approved by advertisers. Advertisements are sponsored content and provided
for informational purposes only. To see our full advertising disclosure, please check out our notes.
Thanks for producer Dan Boyd and the rest of the Motley Fool team. For Matt, John and myself,
thanks for listening, and we'll chat again soon.
