Capgemini stock fell sharply after a negative read on enterprise IT spending abroad. The shares dropped 6.6% to trade at EUR 91.26, and during the session reached an intraday 52-week low of EUR 89.30, following results and guidance from a high-profile sector peer.
Accenture reported fiscal third-quarter 2026 revenues of $18.7 billion, missing the analyst consensus of $18.78 billion, and it trimmed the top end of its full-year revenue growth guidance to 4% from a prior ceiling of 5%. That combination of a revenue shortfall and a tightened outlook from Accenture sent a cautious signal about near-term enterprise IT spending globally, and market participants sold down IT services names in sympathy, including Capgemini.
The Accenture-led reaction exacerbated pressures that had already been building on Capgemini's stock. Earlier in the month, Deutsche Bank reduced its price target to EUR 125 from EUR 140 on June 2, and Jefferies cut its target to EUR 115 from EUR 145 around the same time. Both firms retained cautious Hold ratings on the shares. Those analyst adjustments contributed to a weaker sentiment backdrop ahead of the recent session.
Technical indicators confirmed the stock's vulnerability. Capgemini had been trading consistently below its 20-, 50- and 200-day moving averages, a configuration flagged as a "Strong Sell" by standard technical measures. With the price already beneath those key moving averages, the stock had little technical cushion when the sector-wide catalyst arrived, amplifying downside movement.
Market breadth offered no offset. U.S. equities were under pressure, with the S&P 500 declining 1.2% and the Nasdaq falling 1.3%, reflecting a risk-off tone that hit technology and IT services names particularly hard. Meanwhile, the CAC 40, Capgemini’s home index, had already edged lower in the prior session, and the Accenture-driven sector selloff extended that weakness into Paris trading.
Taken together, the miss from Accenture, the pared guidance, recent analyst price-target reductions, deteriorating technicals and a weak global equity backdrop coalesced to produce a pronounced single-session decline for Capgemini, carrying the share price to its lowest level in more than a year.
Market context and drivers
The immediate catalyst was a peer earnings and guidance update that changed the market's near-term expectations for enterprise IT spending. Pre-existing downward pressure from analyst target cuts and the stock's technical posture left Capgemini exposed to that trigger. Broader equity weakness in the U.S. and a soft opening for the CAC 40 compounded selling pressure during Paris trading.
What happened to the numbers
- Capgemini shares fell 6.6% to EUR 91.26 and reached an intraday 52-week low of EUR 89.30.
- Accenture reported fiscal Q3 2026 revenue of $18.7 billion versus an $18.78 billion analyst consensus, and lowered the top end of its full-year revenue growth guidance to 4% from 5%.
- Deutsche Bank cut its Capgemini price target to EUR 125 from EUR 140 (June 2), and Jefferies trimmed its target to EUR 115 from EUR 145 around the same time; both kept Hold ratings.