New York, February 25, 2026, 09:47 EST — Regular session
- Braze shares slipped roughly 1.7% out of the gate, following a surge of nearly 10% the day before.
- Software shares have been bouncing around, reacting to new U.S. economic numbers and a steady stream of AI product announcements.
- Eyes now turn to Braze’s upcoming earnings report, slated for late March.
Braze, Inc. dropped 1.7% to $17.03 early Wednesday, giving up a bit of ground following a sharp bounce from near its 52-week low just the day before. (Google)
Braze has ended up as a kind of bellwether for investor appetite: when the macro numbers look up, money flows into smaller software plays like this one; as soon as sentiment sours, that interest fades just as quickly.
The conversation around “AI agents” in marketing and customer-engagement is anything but settled—some see a boost, others warn of risks, and plenty say both. Shares linked to the trend have see-sawed in fits and starts.
Braze closed out Tuesday at $17.315, climbing from Monday’s finish at $15.79, end-of-day figures posted on the company’s investor page show. (Braze)
Stocks rebounded Tuesday, tracking gains across the board after the Conference Board reported a pickup in U.S. consumer confidence for February, a reading that helped take some pressure off sectors tied to economic growth. (Reuters)
Anthropic rolled out additional options for companies to integrate its Claude platform, coming just weeks after an earlier launch rattled traditional software stocks, according to a Reuters report. (Reuters)
Braze climbed 9.8% Tuesday, a StockStory report published by Barchart noted, as software shares like monday.com and LiveRamp also advanced that session. (Barchart)
On Tuesday, Braze pushed deeper into the AI conversation, releasing a new “Customer Engagement Review” report. The company said it sees a “trust gap” opening up between what marketers expect and how consumers actually feel. “The rise of agentic commerce can feel like a moment where marketers’ direct customer relationships are slipping away,” Astha Malik, Braze’s chief business officer, said in the release. (Braze)
Braze’s December earnings update showed a 25.5% jump in revenue from a year earlier, coming in at $190.8 million, though the company still posted a GAAP operating loss. For the fiscal fourth quarter, Braze projected revenue in the $197.5 million to $198.5 million range and set its non-GAAP EPS guidance between $0.13 and $0.14, excluding items like stock-based compensation. (Braze)
The rebound looks shaky. Should optimism about rate cuts evaporate, or if investors start thinking AI tools might actually shrink marketing software budgets instead of boosting them, Braze could easily slip back to the lows it touched this week.
Earnings are up next. Wall Street lists Braze’s report for around March 26, with investors eyeing fresh details on growth, margins, and how AI-powered products are catching on. (Zacks)