Is ServiceNow Signaling a Buy Before July 22 Report?
ServiceNow (NYSE:NOW) is drawing investor attention despite a 30% decline year-to-date, driven by 21% subscription revenue growth, a $12.85 billion forward-demand backlog, and four consecutive EPS beats. As of July 13, the stock trades at $112.86, down 23% year-to-date and 41% annually, creating a compelling entry point for retirement-focused investors ahead of its July 22 report.
Accelerating Subscription Momentum and Demand Backlog
Q4 FY25 revenue rose 20.66% YoY to $3.568 billion, while current remaining performance obligations (CRPO)—the cleanest forward-demand metric in enterprise software—climbed 25% YoY to $12.85 billion. Management projects FY26 subscription revenue of $15.53-$15.57 billion, with 32% non-GAAP operating margins and 36% free cash flow margins. Now Assist net new ACV more than doubled YoY, and the company has beaten EPS estimates in all four quarters of FY25.
Market Position and Analyst Alignment
ServiceNow outperforms Salesforce, which fell roughly a third amid a $3.6 billion defensive acquisition, and significantly outpaces Microsoft in revenue growth. A put/call ratio of 0.33 and 43 analyst buy ratings against 1 sell signal highlight rare pre-earnings alignment between options desks and Wall Street.
Capital Return Strategy Intensifies
The board authorized an additional $5 billion under the buyback in January and signaled an imminent $2 billion accelerated share repurchase. With shares near multi-year lows after the 5-for-1 split, each dollar of ASR retires more stock than six months prior. Free cash flow reached $4.576 billion in FY25, up 34%, funding returns without leverage. For retirees pursuing compound growth, this buyback velocity and margin expansion presents a strategic setup.
Markets are pricing in ServiceNow’s accelerating fundamentals and capital return trajectory, but its competitive moat in enterprise digital transformation—particularly amid global semiconductor supply chain volatility—positions it as a defensive growth play in tech portfolios.