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Salesforce shareholders rejected the company's proposed compensation plan for top executives. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff is likely not dancing this week. The company said in a regulatory filing on Monday that a slim majority — 53% — of shareholder votes were cast against the proposed compensation plan for Benioff and other top executives. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers.
Persons: , Elon, Marc Benioff Organizations: Service, Business
Salesforce investors voted against the company's compensation plan for top executives, after shareholder advisory groups raised concerns about equity awards granted to CEO Marc Benioff. According to a regulatory filing on Monday, the resolution to approve the compensation received 339.3 million votes in favor and 404.8 million against at the annual meeting held on Thursday. For the 2024 fiscal year, Benioff received $39.6 million in total pay, up from $29.9 million in the prior year. While Benioff's salary was flat at $1.55 million, he received additional stock and option awards and non-equity incentive plan compensation, according to the proxy statement. Benioff was already among the largest holders of Salesforce, with a stake of over 2% valued at close to $6 billion.
Persons: Marc Benioff, Glass Lewis, Benioff, didn't, Salesforce Organizations: Institutional, Services
Read previewAs a kid, Rob Chisholm was not drawn to the fast-paced, jet-setting life of a Wall Street banker. Well, maybe if I wanted to be an investment banker or something, I would care about that, Chisholm remembers thinking. Chisholm, on the other hand, is very open about his unorthodox path to Wall Street and the resulting feelings of being an outsider. AdvertisementWhen Chisholm was in college, he rejected the "cliche" of going to an Ivy League and getting a job on Wall Street. At the time, Chisholm admitted, Wall Street seemed like the "complete opposite in terms of the culture and the incentives" he thought he wanted.
Persons: , Rob Chisholm, Chisholm, Goldman Sachs, Frank Quattrone, Eager, dealmakers, he's, Wall, Goldman, I've Organizations: Service, Wall Street, Princeton, Business, Ivy League, Citi, Qatalyst Partners, Middlesex, Princeton's, Middlebury College, ACG Partners, Deutsche Bank, Investment Locations: Canada, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, Massachusetts, Vermont, Boston, San Francisco, tooting
The stock market had another great run since the Club's May Monthly Meeting. Here's our top-five performing portfolio names since the May 30 close through Wednesday's close, the eve of our June Monthly Meeting. AVGO YTD mountain Broadcom (AVGO) year-to-date performance Broadcom took the top spot since the May Monthly Meeting, jumping 16.7% in that timeframe. And on Wednesday, the stock mounted a late-day comeback to close up 0.25% on the day of its annual shareholder meeting. Even with their recent comeback, Salesforce shares are down more than 10% from their close May 29.
Persons: , We're, It's, Salesforce, Snowflake —, we've, Davidson, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Brendan Mcdermid Organizations: Federal Reserve, Nasdaq, Club, Nvidia, Broadcom, dethroning Club, Microsoft, Tuesday's, Apple Intelligence, Apple, Rosenblatt Securities, Networks, Palo Alto, CNBC, Traders, New York Stock Exchange Locations: Wednesday's, China, Palo, New York City
Pa Images | Getty ImagesLONDON — British technology executives and entrepreneurs want the next government to focus on promoting skills around the development and use of artificial intelligence and growth-oriented fiscal measures. Upskilling in an AI ageOne thing U.K. tech executives are pushing for is fostering innovation in artificial intelligence and cultivating citizens' grasp on AI-centric skills — across multiple generations. Last month, dozens of business executives, entrepreneurs, and investors signed an open letter stating their support for Labour in the upcoming election. Leon Neal | Getty Images News | Getty ImagesSignatories included several influential names in the world of U.K. tech: Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales, Founders Forum co-founder Jonathan Goodwin, and Atom Bank CEO Mark Mullen. Tech bosses CNBC spoke with found themselves unable to point to specific policies and plans from either of the main political parties.
Persons: Rishi Sunak, Sir Keir Starmer, Keir Starmer, Zahra, Salesforce, Einstein, Astro, Matthew Houlihan, Rachel Reeves, Angela Rayner, Leon Neal, Jimmy Wales, Jonathan Goodwin, Mark Mullen, Sunak, Liz Truss, Jeremy Hunt, Danny Lawson, Rishi Khosla, Khosla Organizations: Conservatives, Labour Party, LONDON, it's, Labour, CNBC, Innovation, Cisco, coy, Centre, Getty, Founders Forum, Atom Bank, BAE Systems, Tech Locations: Downing, Salesforce's, Europe, Purfleet, United Kingdom, Ukraine, British, Barrow, Furness, England
Gary Hershorn | Getty ImagesLONDON — Enterprise tech giant Salesforce is opening an artificial intelligence center in London, making a bullish bet on the U.K. as a global technology hub. Salesforce said it expects the AI center to play a role in creating 500,000 AI-related jobs in the U.K. $4 billion investment in UKThe AI center forms part of a $4 billion investment in the U.K., which Salesforce committed to make over five years in 2023. In addition to announcing the opening of its AI center, Salesforce also revealed that it had invested more than $200 million into U.K. startups via its venture capital arm, Salesforce Ventures. Salesforce reported revenue of $9.13 billion for the period, up 11% from a year ago but below analyst expectations of $9.17 billion.
Persons: Gary Hershorn, Salesforce, Zahra Bahrololoumi, Aston Martin, McLaren, John Lewis, Salesforce's, Salesforce's Bahrololoumi Organizations: Getty, Enterprise, Salesforce Ventures, Labs Locations: New York City, London, U.S, Ireland
Mason Morfit, Salesforce board member and co-CEO of activist investor ValueAct, has increased his stake in Marc Benioff's software firm to just under $1 billion, acquiring $99 million worth of shares earlier this week, just days after the company reported its first revenue miss since 2006. The trade was disclosed in a regulatory filing Thursday, sending Salesforce shares up around 3.5% on the news in morning trading. The other activists eyeing Salesforce at the time included Elliott Management, Dan Loeb's Third Point, and Starboard Value. Earlier this year, Salesforce's widely reported pursuit of data management firm Informatica sent shares see-sawing before the putative target said it was not considering a sale. Salesforce shares briefly eclipsed their previous 2021 highs earlier this year, but have since given back those gains and are down 4% year-to-date.
Persons: Mason Morfit, ValueAct, Marc Benioff's, Morfit, Benioff's, eyeing Salesforce, Elliott, Dan Loeb's, Benioff, Salesforce's, Jeff Ubben, Bob Iger, Trian's Nelson Peltz, Ike Perlmutter, Salesforce Organizations: ValueAct, Elliott Management, Informatica, Microsoft, Marvel Locations: New York, U.S, Benioff
Barra sold more than $27 million worth of stock on May 28, joining several other GM insiders who have done similar trades this year. Meanwhile, Benioff sold more than $12 million worth of shares over the course of several days. Salesforce CEO Benioff sold 45,000 shares at an average price of $270.70 for a total of $12.18 million. The biggest move came from two insiders at a small investment firm — Oxford Lane Capital — who combined to buy $50 million worth of the stock. Claros Mortgage CEO Richard Mack bought 160,000 shares at an average price of $7.20 for a total of $1.15 million.
Persons: Mary Barra, Marc Benioff, Barra, Benioff, execs, Verity, Salesforce's, General Motors CEO Barra, Anthony Casalena, Brice Hill, Gerald Morgan, Cameron Breitner, Jonathan Cohen, Saul Rosenthal, Joseph Adams Jr, John Rakolta Jr, Richard Mack, , Nick Wells Organizations: VerityData, General Motors CEO, Texas, Lane Capital —, Capital Partners, Oxford Lane Capital, FTAI Aviation, Petco, Wellness, Claros Locations: 10b5
How much do we pay for an enterprise software business that may have hit the wall, suddenly slowing down to sales growth in the high single digits from growth in the double digits? But Salesforce is the most glaring of the enterprise software behemoths, which include ServiceNow , Adobe , Workday , SAP , Intuit , and fallen star MongoDB . Or to put it another way, Salesforce needs its clients to hire more people to increase sales growth. SaaS is another form of enterprise software, is another form of applications software, is another form of kryptonite. Of course, there will be enterprise software companies that defy the slowdown.
Persons: Marc Benioff, Dow Jones, Salesforce, Ullal, Jensen Huang, that's, Thoma, , Elon Musk's, Wells, It's, Charlie Scharf, Goldman Sachs, Dan Schulman, Bill Ready, Stanley Black, Decker, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Marlena Sloss Organizations: Oracle, Dow, Adobe, SAP, Intuit, Mad, Arista Networks, Microsoft, Nvidia, Arm Holdings, Thoma Bravo, Taiwan Semiconductor, Indy, Federal, Paypal, Fed, Jim Cramer's Charitable, CNBC, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: Norfolk Southern, Wells Fargo, Wells, Dover, Informatica
In this way, the nonfarm payroll report also offers clues on the near-term path of inflation. As always, payroll processing firm ADP will release its May private-sector jobs report before the government's nonfarm payroll report. On Tuesday, we'll get the latest JOLTS data, shorthand for the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey conducted by the Labor Department. Earnings A few noteworthy earnings reports set for next week include CrowdStrike and Hewlett Packard Enterprise after the close on Tuesday. A report released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed the US economy added 311,000 jobs in February.
Persons: industrials, Eaton, Locker, Salesforce, we've, FactSet, Dow Jones, we'll, Ferguson, OLLI, Campbell Soup, Brown, Forman, LULU, JM Smucker, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Joe Raedle Organizations: Nasdaq, Dow Jones, Federal, Energy, Coterra Energy, Palo Alto Networks, Broadcom, Microsoft, Costco, Labor, Labor Department, Institute for Supply, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Body, Donaldson Company, DCI, Brands, Natural Foods, THOR Industries, ABM Industries, Vail Resorts, MTN, NGL Energy, Jim Cramer's Charitable, CNBC, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Getty Locations: Chicago, Palo, U.S, Bath, Toro, Miami , Florida
Dow member Salesforce dropped about 19% during the week, which made it the most oversold stock in the market. With this in mind, CNBC Pro screened for the most overbought and oversold stocks on Wall Street as measured by their 14-day relative strength index, or RSI. Stocks with a 14-day RSI below 30 are considered oversold, suggesting shares may be due for a comeback. On the other hand, a 14-day RSI higher than 70 indicates a stock is overbought and may soon pull back. Biopharmaceutical company Bristol-Myers Squibb was the second-most oversold stock of the week.
Persons: Salesforce, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Myers Squibb, Meyers, Ralph Lauren Organizations: Federal, Nasdaq, Dow Jones, Dow, Investors, CNBC Pro, Wall Street, LSEG, Meyers Squibb, Tech, HP Locations: Bristol
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWhy Wedbush's Dan Ives is staying bullish on Salesforce despite first revenue miss since 2006Dan Ives, Managing Director of Equity Research at Wedbush, discusses Salesforce's stock plunge following its first revenue miss since 2006.
Persons: Dan Ives Organizations: Equity Research, Wedbush
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailMarket is in the 'digestion phase' of new software applications, says Jefferies' Brent ThillBrent Thill, Jefferies tech sector leader, joins 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss what happened with Salesforce's quarterly earnings results, where Salesforce will be spending more of its capital, and much more.
Persons: Jefferies, Brent Thill Brent Thill Organizations: Jefferies
Salesforce stock plunged 21% after the company reported its first revenue miss since 2006. AdvertisementSalesforce stock plunged as much as 21% on Thursday after the company reported its first revenue miss since 2006. Here are the key numbers:AdvertisementQ1 Revenue: $9.13 billion, versus analyst estimates of $9.17 billion$9.13 billion, versus analyst estimates of $9.17 billion Q1 Adjusted earnings per share: $2.44, versus analyst estimates of $2.38$2.44, versus analyst estimates of $2.38 Q2 Revenue guidance: $9.2 billion to $9.25 billion, versus analyst estimates of $9.37 billion"Macro headwinds returned with a vengeance," analysts at Citi said in a note on Thursday. AdvertisementGoldman Sachs reiterated its "Buy" rating on Salesforce and categorized the weakness in the company's results as "cyclical headwinds" that should ultimately dissipate. AdvertisementCiti reiterated its "Neutral" rating and took a more cautious view on Salesforce following their results.
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, Dan Ives, Ives Organizations: Service, Citi, Bank of America, Sales
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailSalesforce shares plunge on first revenue miss since 2006: Here's what to knowBrian Schwartz, Oppenheimer senior analyst and managing director, joins 'Squawk Box' to break down Salesforce's quarterly earnings results, which reported weaker-than-expected revenue and issued guidance that trailed Wall Street’s expectations, impact of the company's AI offering, and more.
Persons: Brian Schwartz, Oppenheimer
Even a sharp sell-off in Salesforce stock Thursday — down as much as 21% intraday — isn't keeping some analysts on Wall Street from sticking with their optimistic outlooks on the maker of customer relationship management software. Salesforce executives tied the disappointing results to elongated deal cycles throughout the first quarter that hit the company's booking schedule. Weiss reiterated an overweight rating on Salesforce, albeit with a $320 per share price target, down from $350. Goldman Sachs analyst Kash Rangan reiterated a buy rating on Salesforce stock, but lowered his price target to $315 per share from $345. The analyst reiterated an overweight rating on the stock with a $300 per share price target, or about 10% upside from yesterday's close.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase, Keith Weiss, Weiss, Kash Rangan, Rangan, Mark Murphy, Tyler Radke, Radke Organizations: Wall, JPMorgan, Citigroup Locations: Salesforce, CY25
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailSalesforce's plunge doesn't deter bull case for stock, says Citizens JMP's Patrick WalravensPatrick Walravens, director of technology research at Citizens JMP, joins "The Exchange" to break down Saleforce's stock slump.
Persons: JMP's Patrick Walravens Patrick Walravens Organizations: Citizens
Photographer: David Odisho/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesShares of Salesforce tumbled 20% Thursday morning, putting the stock on pace for its worst day in nearly 20 years. Its worst trading day on record is July 4, 2004, when shares fell 27% just days after the company went public. Salesforce expects second-quarter adjusted earnings per share of $2.34 to $2.36 on $9.2 billion to $9.25 billion in revenue. Goldman Sachs analysts reiterated their buy rating on the stock and said they view Salesforce as a "high-quality software franchise." Goldman Sachs analysts said in a note Wednesday that Salesforce is "an under-appreciated Gen-AI winner."
Persons: Marc Benioff, Benioff, David Odisho, Salesforce, LSEG, Salesforce's, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, — CNBC's Michael Bloom, Jordan Novet Organizations: Salesforce.com Inc, Bloomberg, Getty, Citi Locations: San Francisco , California, Francisco's
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailPowers: If Salesforce beats earnings, the stock should see a good popMatt Powers, Managing Partner at Powers Advisory Group, discusses his expectations for Salesforce's first quarter earnings report.
Persons: Matt Powers, Salesforce's Organizations: Powers Advisory
The company's balance of margin expansion with the potential for faster top-line growth should lead to strong earnings growth. Non-GAAP operating margin benefited from the lower cost of revenues, sales and marketing, and general and administrative expenses. Management reduced its revenue growth forecast for the subscription and support business to slightly below 10% over last year. The adjusted operating margin target of 32.5% was reaffirmed and is in line with expectations. For the second quarter, Salesforce estimates revenues of $9.2 to $9.25 billion, below the $9.345 billion estimate.
Persons: Salesforce isn't, Brian Millham, Marc Benioff, we've, Salesforce, That's, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, David Paul Morris Organizations: Revenue, LSEG, SAP, Microsoft, Nvidia, CRM, Management, buybacks, CNBC, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: San Francisco , California, U.S
Analysts surveyed by LSEG had expected $2.40 in adjusted earnings per share on $9.37 billion in revenue. It's the first time since 2006 that Salesforce fell short on revenue, according to LSEG data. The company now expects adjusted earnings of $9.86 to $9.94 per share, compared with $9.68 to $9.76 three months ago. Analysts polled by LSEG were looking for $9.76 in adjusted earnings per share and $38.08 billion in revenue. During the quarter, Salesforce started selling its Einstein Copilot assistant sales and customer service reps.
Persons: Marc Benioff, LSEG, Salesforce, Einstein, Slack, Robert Hum Organizations: Economic, Revenue, Professional Services Locations: Davos, Switzerland
After Salesforce posted its first revenue miss since 2006, CEO Marc Benioff told CNBC's Jim Cramer how the market for enterprise software companies has changed since the pandemic. The reality is, you're going to have heterogeneous buying environments, it's going to happen," Benioff said. "And we're in this post-pandemic reality where the buying environment has — and we've talked about this now for a few quarters — been very measured for enterprise software companies. Benioff said that during the pandemic, companies "aggressively" bought enterprise software. "It's been a complete financial transformation," Benioff said.
Persons: Salesforce, Marc Benioff, CNBC's Jim Cramer, Benioff, we've, Wednesday's, they've, he's, It's, it's Organizations: FedEx, Air India
He was offered $150,000 a year for a base salary, restricted stock units, and an annual bonus. AdvertisementSalesforceHe moved to Salesforce, joining in a slightly more senior software role from his last role at SAP. His base salary was about $150,000, stocks would amount to $17,500 per year, and his annual bonus was $15,000. AdvertisementThe new role moved him from software engineer to senior software engineer. Business Insider has verified his offer letters, employment history, and Meta compensation.
Persons: , Hemant Pandey, I've, Tesla Pandey, Tesla, Pandey, Salesforce, hadn't, there's, it's Organizations: Service, SAP, Meta, Business, Salesforce, LinkedIn, Menlo Locations: Salesforce
"It's very early days in generative AI," said Jassy, who succeeded Jeff Bezos as CEO in 2021. Davidson, told CNBC that Amazon was "caught flat-footed" by the generative AI boom. During a Q&A session on Wednesday, Jassy was asked twice about the status of Amazon's generative AI efforts. He said the company is "seeing a lot of momentum" in generative AI within AWS to where it's now a multibillion-dollar business based on annualized revenue. Amazon has previously said it intends to use generative AI to make Alexa more conversational.
Persons: Noah Berger, Andy Jassy, OpenAI's ChatGPT, Adam Selipsky, Jassy, Jeff Bezos, Matt Garman, Gil Luria, Davidson, Luria, Bezos, Selipsky, Casey McGee, McGee, Anthropic, Dario Amodei, OpenAI, it's, Garman, Amazon, wasn't, Dilip Kumar, Kumar, Swami Sivasubramanian, Jamie Meyers, Meyers, Matt, Jordan Novet, Kate Rooney Organizations: Web Services, Getty, Amazon, Microsoft, Google, D.A, CNBC, Amazon Web, Alexa, AWS, Nvidia, ChatGPT, Accenture, Toyota, Nasdaq, Investments Locations: Las Vegas, Vegas, Bezos, Anthropic
Whether today's activist investors contribute any genuine economic value is open for debate. As this year's proxy season draws to a close, defeat after defeat for activist investors in proxy fights this year – most prominently at Disney and Norfolk Southern – raises the question: Are activist investors increasingly getting de-activated, losing their credibility and power? These self-styled "activist investors" are distinct from the original activists who helped catalyze needed governance reforms two decades back. Many of today's activist investors are a far cry from the original, heroic crusaders for shareholder value who pioneered the activism space decades ago. However, given the failing financial performance of many of today's activist investors, their losing streak in proxy fights and increasing public rejection of their bullying tactics, the credibility and value of activist investors writ large is increasingly imperiled.
Persons: Nelson Peltz's, Ed Garden, Ralph Whitworth, John Biggs of TIAA, John Bogle of, Ira Millstein, Weil, Nell Minow, Bob Monks, Harvard's Stephen Davis, Carl Icahn's, Aubrey McClendon, , Bill Cohan, Jamie Dimon, Glass Lewis, resoundingly, Mason Morfit's ValueAct, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Lester, Steven Tian Organizations: CNBC, Salesforce, Dow Jones, Disney, Norfolk Southern, Relational Investors, John Bogle of Vanguard, Services, Chesapeake, Norfolk, JetBlue, Elanco, of Institutional Investors, United Shareholders Association, Responsibility Research, ISS, Lester Crown, Management, Yale University, Yale's, Institute Locations: Norfolk Southern, greenmailers, America
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