TLDRServiceNow shares advanced 3.7% Tuesday, closing at $113.44 with approximately 17.5 million shares tradedThe enterprise software firm introduced AI-driven products: Autonomous Workforce and EmployeeWorksA strategic partnership with NTT DOCOMO and StarHub was announced for autonomous telecom roaming solutionsWall Street maintains a “Moderate Buy” rating with a consensus price target of $192.06Shares have declined 23.2% year-to-date and currently trade 45.8% beneath the 52-week peak of $208.94Shares of ServiceNow (NOW) advanced 3.7% during Tuesday’s trading session, reaching an intraday peak of $114.92 before closing at $113.44. The stock finished Monday at $109.42.ServiceNow, Inc., NOWTrading volume reached approximately 17.5 million shares for the day. This figure represented about 12% less than the stock’s typical daily volume of roughly 19.9 million shares.The upward movement suggests bargain hunters are returning to the stock following a sustained selloff that has pressured enterprise software equities.ServiceNow has declined 23.2% year-to-date in 2026. The current price level represents a 45.8% discount from the 52-week high of $208.94 reached in July 2025.Tuesday’s rally reflects growing investor confidence that AI technologies may complement rather than displace enterprise software platforms. Company leadership has consistently challenged narratives suggesting AI will eliminate demand for their solutions.Just five days earlier, the stock had already jumped 4.3% following comments from Nvidia’s CEO Jensen Huang, who dismissed concerns that AI would destroy the enterprise software industry. Those remarks triggered rallies across the sector, including gains for Zscaler (ZS) and CrowdStrike (CRWD).Product Innovation and Strategic PartnershipServiceNow unveiled two AI-enhanced solutions this week: Autonomous Workforce and EmployeeWorks. These offerings are designed to broaden workflow automation capabilities for enterprise clients.The company simultaneously announced a strategic collaboration with NTT DOCOMO and StarHub. This partnership leverages ServiceNow CRM technology to enable autonomous roaming resolution for telecommunications providers — demonstrating application beyond the firm’s core IT service management offerings.Additionally, HCLTech received ServiceNow’s 2026 Partner of the Year award, underscoring the strength of its partner ecosystem and channel strategy.Financial Performance and Wall Street OutlookServiceNow delivered its latest quarterly earnings on January 28th, posting earnings per share of $0.92 — exceeding analyst expectations of $0.89 by $0.03.Quarterly revenue totaled $3.57 billion, surpassing the Street’s estimate of $3.53 billion. This represented year-over-year growth of 20.7%. The company achieved a net profit margin of 13.16% and return on equity of 18.54%.Analyst opinions on the stock’s trajectory vary significantly. Goldman Sachs maintains a $216 price objective. BNP Paribas recently lowered its target from $186 to $120 with a neutral stance. UBS established a $115 target.According to MarketBeat data, the consensus recommendation stands at “Moderate Buy” with an average price target of $192.06. Among analysts tracking the stock, 32 rate it a Buy, three assign a Strong Buy, six recommend Hold, and two rate it a Sell.The stock’s 50-day moving average currently sits at $125.70. Its 200-day moving average stands at $158.84.Institutional ownership accounts for 87.18% of outstanding shares. Recent insider activity includes CFO Gina Mastantuono selling 2,075 shares in December at $170, while insider Kevin Thomas Mcbride sold 1,400 shares in February at $105.71.Wall Street projects full-year earnings per share of $8.93 for the current fiscal year.The post ServiceNow (NOW) Stock Jumps 3.7% as Dip Buyers Return appeared first on Blockonomi.