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AI: Jobs, Power & Money
16APR

IBM beat sold on consulting miss

4 min read
13:29UTC

IBM reported Q1 2026 revenue above consensus, and the stock fell as much as 8% after hours on a $10m consulting shortfall.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

A revenue beat and an 8% sell-off; traders now price AI substitution per firm, not per sector.

IBM reported first-quarter 2026 revenue of $15.92bn on 22 April, beating the $15.62bn Street consensus, yet the stock fell between 6% and 8% after hours 1. CEO Arvind Krishna called AI, meaning artificial intelligence, 'both a growth driver and a productivity engine'. The consulting line came in at $5.27bn, up 4% year on year, about $10m short of the $5.28bn the Street was modelling 2.

Investors treated the beat as backward-looking and the consulting shortfall as a signal about the next four quarters. Consulting is priced in billable hours, and the tool IBM itself disclosed on the call, watsonx Code Assistant known internally as Bob, is delivering substantial developer productivity gains against the same mainframe-modernisation book consulting rests on.

The consulting line sits on top of roughly $30bn of mainframe modernisation, much of it COBOL legacy work. COBOL, the Common Business-Oriented Language, is a 60-year-old mainframe programming language that still runs core systems at banks and insurers. Anthropic's Claude Code product, which claims to automate COBOL translation, triggered one of IBM's sharper sell-offs in February. The 22 April consulting miss is the first earnings-cycle evidence that the market was pricing that risk correctly. IBM's own internal productivity figures, broken out separately in the same release (ID:EV04), quantify the mechanism behind the miss.

Goldman's monthly substitution model and Stanford's JOLTS-based hires-not-made analysis are the operative measures the market was pricing. The IBM share move is Wall Street marking down a specific company's consulting model against exactly that maths.

One offset inside the print: IBM tripled its entry-level hiring in 2026 after pausing it last year, on the view that 'AI still needs skilled human judgment to deliver value' 3. The cohort-scarring mechanism that Goldman documented for displaced young workers is the risk the IBM tape is pricing on a per-firm basis. Both readings claim the same capability shift justifies their trade. IBM's Q2 2026 print in July is the next test of which one is right.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

IBM is one of the world's biggest tech companies, best known for helping large organisations, including banks, hospitals, and airlines, keep their old computer systems running. IBM charges for this work by the hour: the more work needed, the more IBM gets paid. IBM's own AI tool, watsonx Code Assistant (known internally as Bob), now makes IBM engineers 45% faster at writing code. That sounds like good news, but faster engineers mean clients need to buy fewer IBM hours per project. IBM beat its overall revenue target for the quarter but narrowly missed what analysts expected on consulting specifically, and that small miss sent the stock down 6-8% because investors believe the pattern will continue. In short: IBM built a tool that is quietly making its most profitable service cheaper to deliver, and therefore less well compensated per engagement.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

IBM's consulting moat rests on two structural pillars that AI attacks independently. The first is COBOL legacy work: banks and insurers running 60-year-old mainframe code need IBM to manage it because the skills are scarce. Anthropic's Claude Code announcement in February claimed to automate COBOL translation, removing the scarcity premium on the skill IBM charges for.

The second pillar is transition complexity: moving a bank from COBOL to cloud requires the process redesign, regulatory compliance, and staff retraining that only a large integrator can coordinate alongside the code translation. AI tools compress the code translation portion but leave the process and compliance work intact. IBM's Q1 miss is partly a signal that clients are separating those two components and pricing the code-translation piece independently.

Arvind Krishna is navigating a direct paradox: IBM's internal use of Bob saves the company $4.5bn since 2023, but that same productivity tool, sold or licensed to clients, reduces the hours those clients buy from IBM. Internal efficiency and external revenue destruction run in parallel from the same product.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Accenture, Cognizant, and Capgemini face comparable AI-productivity-as-revenue-compression dynamics; IBM's Q1 miss creates a sector-wide template for analyst pressure at the next earnings cycle.

    Short term · 0.8
  • Consequence

    COBOL legacy contracts worth an estimated $30bn in IBM's book face structural repricing as clients unbundle the code-translation component from the compliance and process work that still requires human integration.

    Medium term · 0.68
  • Opportunity

    IBM's tripling of entry-level hiring, running opposite to Meta's cut, suggests IBM is betting that AI-augmented junior staff will expand total consulting capacity rather than substitute for senior hours, a hypothesis testable across its next three earnings quarters.

    Short term · 0.6
First Reported In

Update #7 · Meta codes its own org chart

Motley Fool / IBM· 23 Apr 2026
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