UiPath Inc (NYSE: PATH) opened in the red this morning after the firm’s muted full-year outlook tempered its Q4 beat and announcement of a new $500 million share repurchase programme.
To some, the sell-off may look like an overreaction, especially given that the software company posted its first-ever profit on a GAAP basis on March 12th.
However, a deeper dive reveals that the post-earnings weakness in UiPath stock does actually make sense.
Why is UiPath stock slipping after Q4 earnings?
For a software-as-a-service (SaaS) company like UiPath, investors typically follow the Rule of 40 – growth + profit margin should exceed 40.
In PATH’s case, while achieving GAAP profitability is a significant “de-risking” event, its revenue slowdown is equally troubling – if not more.
Guiding for about 9% growth in fiscal 2027, versus north of 13% last year, is a psychological blow.
In the tech world, dropping into single-digit growth often causes a “re-rating”, where a stock stops being valued as a “high-growth AI play” and starts being treated as a “mature software utility” that typically commands a lower valuation multiple.
This narrative is what’s hurting the PATH stock price on Thursday.
UiPath’s AI narrative isn’t playing out
Investors are punishing UiPath shares also because management has been aggressively marketing its “Agentic AI” and “UiPath Maestro” platforms as the future of automation.
But if these artificial intelligence (AI) tools are as revolutionary as claimed, why is the outlook for next year so conservative?
The stock price decline on March 12th reflects investor concerns that AI may be cannibalizing their traditional RPA (Robotic Process Automation) business “faster” than the new artificial intelligence offerings can grow it.
As a senior UBS analyst – Radi Sultan – put it, “We have heard an uptick of AI tailwinds unlocking more automatable workflows and a pickup in core RPA/automation demand, but we are uncertain if this is enough to drive a meaningful growth acceleration for UiPath.”
Following the Q4 print, Sultan lowered his price target on PATH to $13.
How to play PATH shares after fourth-quarter results?
Another subtle but critical red flag in UiPath’s Q4 release was the “Dollar-based net retention rate” of 107% – notably below 120% that’s typically expected from top-tier SaaS firms.
This means existing clients are no longer expanding their use of PATH as aggressively as they used to.
Even with the new buyback initiative, if the existing engine isn’t humming, it’s reasonable for investors to flee.
Meanwhile, the buyback announcement in itself may be a white flag only, suggesting management does not see a better way to reinvest that $500 million into the business to generate more than 9% growth.
While it offers a floor to the PATH share price, it doesn’t necessarily drive the ceiling higher.
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