Accenture stock price: what to watch for ACN as Wall Street reopens after Presidents Day

February 17, 2026
Accenture stock price: what to watch for ACN as Wall Street reopens after Presidents Day

New York, February 16, 2026, 19:19 EST — The market has closed.

Accenture (ACN) is set to return to action Tuesday, with U.S. markets closed Monday for Presidents Day. The IT consulting giant finished Friday at $224.23, up 0.9%.

With valuations already under the microscope, the AI rally has hit a pause. On Monday, Reuters noted that several top technology names have seen steep drops in market value this year, as skepticism builds about the pace of returns on their hefty AI investments.

The question cuts straight to Accenture’s business, as the company provides the consulting and systems integration powering many corporate AI deployments. Boards willing to greenlight hefty AI spending can lock in services firms for years. If hesitation creeps in, those optional projects are usually first to get delayed.

This week’s lineup looks crowded. Investors will pick through the Federal Reserve’s meeting minutes on Wednesday, then brace for the PCE price index Friday—the central bank’s go-to inflation metric. February “flash” PMI surveys hit too, offering an early pulse on business activity. SP Global

Accenture shares moved within a range of $220.63 to $227.08 during the last session, exchange data showed, with roughly 7.6 million shares traded.

Back in December, the company topped quarterly revenue forecasts and highlighted robust AI demand. CEO Julie Sweet touted “$21 billion in new bookings,” and the company projected second-quarter revenue between $17.35 billion and $18.0 billion. Reuters

Accenture is seeing patchy demand from its public sector and government clients—a detail investors keep an eye on, since shifts here can quickly impact both bookings and staffing levels. The firm’s blend of consulting and managed services offers some cushion, though it doesn’t fully shield results.

IBM and Cognizant, among others, often react when discussions flare up about enterprise tech spending, margin squeeze, or how fast AI is catching on. With Accenture, it’s not so much if businesses are deploying AI, but whether they’re shelling out for external expertise—and how soon those deals morph into regular income streams.

Still, there’s a flipside. Should this week’s data spur a rise in bond yields, tech and IT services stocks—particularly the rate-sensitive names—could take a hit, even absent any company headlines. And if CFOs start pulling back, incoming business might pivot from sweeping “transform” initiatives to more modest, drawn-out contracts.

Accenture’s earnings call lands March 19, 8:00 a.m. EST, marking the next major event for the company. Bookings trends, changes in demand from government customers, and details on the impact of AI-related projects—are they boosting margins or simply taking up more staff—will be in sharp focus for investors.

Technology News Today

  • UTS study links 3D airway model to personalised respiratory therapy
    April 13, 2026, 8:29 PM EDT. UTS researchers used a patient-specific, CT-derived 3D airway model to simulate continuous high-frequency oscillation therapy (CHFO) and map how pressure, wall shear stress and loading move through the conducting airways. Lead author Dr Suvash C. Saha of the UTS School of Mechanical and Mechatronic Engineering says CHFO supports airway clearance and lung expansion, but its effects vary by region. The study shows the throat and upper airway bear stronger pressure and friction, while larger upper-airway regions carry more of the force. Increasing pressure strengthens support but does not shift where effects concentrate. Airway anatomy largely fixes the loading hotspots, underscoring the need for patient-specific device settings and evidence-based design to improve safety, comfort and effectiveness. The work is published in Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology.