IGV Bounces 5% But the SaaS Selloff May Not Be Over Yet

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By David Beren Published
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IGV Bounces 5% But the SaaS Selloff May Not Be Over Yet

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One of the more volatile tech funds, the iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (NYSEARCA:IGV | IGV Price Prediction) has bounced 5.13% over the past week, reversing after a collapse that left the fund down 18% year-to-date from a December 31 starting price of $105.69. Retail sentiment on Reddit has followed, flipping from deeply bearish in early February to a score of 66 as of March 5. The question investors are wrestling with: can the underlying SaaS business models of IGV’s top holdings sustain revenue and margins in an AI-disrupted environment, or is the re-rating still incomplete?

The selloff had a clear trigger as Anthropic’s new AI automation capabilities accelerated an already-nervous market in early February, with IGV falling across multiple sessions as traders questioned whether AI agents were making traditional SaaS licensing models obsolete. 

Reddit’s “SaaSpocalypse” Debate Hits a Turning Point

During the trough, r/stocks lit up with a post that captured the retail mood precisely. As one commenter wrote, “the market is pricing in a full collapse of the SaaS model, but most of these companies still have multi-year contracts and sticky enterprise customers”: a post on r/stocks titled “Investors are placing massive bets on a software sector recovery”.

Investors are placing massive bets on a software sector recovery
by u/[OP] in stocks

 

That post drew 124 upvotes and 58 comments, the highest engagement in the entire dataset. By February 23, tone had shifted toward contrarian buying, with r/TheRaceTo10Million posting:

Updated thoughts on buying IGV ETF or single SaaS stocks? Is the SaaSpocalypse overblown and irrational? Buy the blood now?
by u/[OP] in TheRaceTo10Million

 

One commenter on the r/TheRaceTo10Million post wrote: “the market is pricing in a full collapse of the SaaS model, but most of these companies still have multi-year contracts and sticky enterprise customers.”

The post got 13 upvotes and 19 comments, signaling early contrarian positioning before the recovery materialized.

Three reasons the bearish case hasn’t fully resolved:

An infographic titled 'iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV) - Investment, Sentiment & Drivers'. Section 1, 'What the Investment Is,' shows a cloud icon with code, detailing the ETF, its Software & Tech Focus (95.5% Tech Sector Weight), Top Holdings (MSFT, PLTR, ORCL, CRM, ~33% of portfolio), a 1-Week Bounce of +5.22%, and a YTD Decline of -17.77%. Section 2, 'The Social Sentiment Score (Reddit),' features a gauge showing a score of 66 pointing to 'Bullish (High),' with a trendline indicating a shift from Feb 2: 32 (Bearish) to Mar 5: 66 (Bullish), described as a 'Shift from deeply bearish to bullish.' Section 3, 'What is Driving That Score Today,' is split into two columns: 'Bullish Drivers (The Bounce)' mentions 'Retail 'Recovery Bet'' with Reddit users questioning 'SaaSpocalypse' and high engagement on posts betting on software sector recovery; 'Bearish Drivers (The Fear)' points to 'AI Disruption Anxiety' concerning new AI capabilities (e.g., Anthropic) making traditional SaaS licensing models obsolete. The infographic includes a '24/7 Wall St' footer.
24/7 Wall St.
This infographic details the investment profile of the iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV), its social sentiment score of 66 (Bullish) on March 5, 2026, and the key drivers influencing this sentiment, marking a shift from deeply bearish to bullish.
  • AI agents are increasingly embedded directly into enterprise workflows, eroding the value of standalone SaaS subscriptions that make up the bulk of IGV’s holdings
  • Goldman Sachs characterized the selloff as “indiscriminate repricing” but only recommended four names with specific structural advantages, not a broad sector recovery
  • IGV’s one-year return of -9% lags the Invesco QQQ Trust’s +20.25% over the same period, reflecting a genuine re-rating of the sector’s fundamental earnings outlook
 

Where IGV Goes From Here

Dan Niles of Niles Investment Management noted that “narrative follows price,” warning that recent price gains may be rationalizing themselves rather than reflecting a genuine fundamental shift. He identified database, security, and high-production-cost gaming software as the sub-sectors best positioned post-shakeout, noting that the sub-sector divergence suggests the broad fund may not capture the recovery as efficiently as targeted positions in those specific categories. IGV’s top four holdings, Microsoft, Palantir, Salesforce, and Oracle, represent roughly 33% of the portfolio, so the fund’s fate is heavily tied to whether those names, including Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Palantir (NYSE:PLTR), Salesforce (NYSE:CRM), and Oracle (NYSE:ORCL), can defend their earnings quality and competitive moats heading into the next earnings cycle.

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About the Author David Beren →

David Beren has been a Flywheel Publishing contributor since 2022. Writing for 24/7 Wall St. since 2023, David loves to write about topics of all shapes and sizes. As a technology expert, David focuses heavily on consumer electronics brands, automobiles, and general technology. He has previously written for LifeWire, formerly About.com. As a part-time freelance writer, David’s “day job” has been working on and leading social media for multiple Fortune 100 brands. David loves the flexibility of this field and its ability to reach customers exactly where they like to spend their time. Additionally, David previously published his own blog, TmoNews.com, which reached 3 million readers in its first year. In addition to freelance and social media work, David loves to spend time with his family and children and relive the glory days of video game consoles by playing any retro game console he can get his hands on.

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