Accenture stock price slides nearly 4% as CEO share sale, AI jitters weigh on ACN

Accenture stock price slides nearly 4% as CEO share sale, AI jitters weigh on ACN

February 12, 2026

New York, Feb 12, 2026, 15:40 EST — Regular session

  • Accenture shares dipped 3.8% to close at $221.58, slipping as low as $215.22 during the day
  • In an SEC filing, CEO Julie Sweet revealed her intention to sell 6,057 shares
  • Traders are focusing on the earnings call set for March 19 and the May 20 deadline for a GAO protest related to a federal contract

Accenture plc shares dropped 3.8% to $221.58 Thursday afternoon, deepening a two-day decline. The stock dipped to a low of $215.22, with roughly 7.5 million shares traded.

Investors are getting pickier about which companies gain—and which lose—now that AI tools are weaving deeper into business operations. “The monolithic AI trade is clearly breaking down,” noted Garrett Melson, portfolio strategist at Natixis Investment Managers Solutions. Meanwhile, Keith Lerner of Truist pointed out, “it’s tough for companies to come out and disprove the narrative.” Reuters

Accenture’s position is crucial since it’s deeply involved in enterprise tech budgets and outsourcing choices. The stock closed Wednesday at $230.43, roughly 41% off its 52-week peak of $392.02, per MarketWatch data.

Thursday’s sell-off wasn’t limited to just one player: IBM slid 4.6%, Cognizant dropped 6.1%, DXC gave up 5.2%, and Infosys’ U.S.-listed shares tumbled 9.2%. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF dropped 1.2%, while the Invesco QQQ fell 1.8%.

A recent filing caught the eye. Chair and CEO Julie Sweet sold 6,057 Accenture shares on Feb. 10, following a Rule 10b5-1 plan—a prearranged insider trading schedule—and still owned 15,255 shares immediately after the transaction.

On Wednesday, Accenture named Rachel Frey as its chief communications officer, a brand-new role that will manage media, financial communications, and public affairs. “Clear communication has never been more important,” Sweet said. Frey described the appointment as “an important moment” for both the company and the industry. Accenture Newsroom

Science Applications International Corp has filed a bid protest over a $1.4 billion task order awarded to Accenture Federal Services for the Army Corps of Engineers’ Castle-Net program, according to Washington Technology. The Government Accountability Office is expected to issue a ruling by May 20.

Some investors believe the recent dip reflects positioning rather than the fundamentals, as traders react to headlines and reduce stakes in labor-intensive models. Others counter that while AI might cut hours on routine tasks, it could spark larger reinvention efforts as clients overhaul their systems.

The downside scenario looks tricky. If clients hold off on discretionary projects or automation-driven pricing pressures hit before staffing and delivery costs adjust, margins might tighten and bookings—the value of signed contracts—could drop.

Accenture’s fiscal second-quarter earnings call is set for March 19 at 8 a.m. EST. Investors will be tuning in for news on demand trends, AI-driven projects, and any changes in their federal contract portfolio.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

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