C3.ai Inc. (AI) shares were trading flat Thursday morning as investors processed a second-quarter earnings report that was technically a beat but came with plenty of context about what's been going wrong.
The Numbers Look Better, But There's a Story Behind Them
The company posted a quarterly loss of 25 cents per share, which sounds bad until you realize Wall Street was expecting 33 cents. Revenue also topped estimates at $75.15 million versus the $74.86 million forecast, with subscription revenue making up 93% of the total. So far, so good.
But the real story here isn't the marginal beat on the numbers. It's the candid admission from CEO Stephen Ehikian that the company's execution has been, in his words, "unacceptable." He didn't mince words about what went wrong: a messy sales reorganization and the serious health crisis of former CEO Thomas Siebel, who dealt with significant vision impairment from an autoimmune disease.
That kind of honesty is refreshing, even if the underlying problems aren't. Ehikian emphasized that C3.ai is now working through a turnaround plan, and he made it clear that the demand environment for enterprise AI remains strong. "There's work to be done," he said, signaling that the focus is shifting back to consistent execution.
What's Next for C3.ai
Looking ahead, C3.ai issued third-quarter revenue guidance between $72 million and $80 million. The analyst consensus was $75.63 million, so the midpoint of that range is basically right on target. Not exactly a vote of overwhelming confidence, but not a disaster either.
The technical picture is a bit messier. The stock is currently trading about 7.3% below its 50-day moving average and 26.4% below its 200-day moving average. That positioning suggests C3.ai is in a longer-term bearish trend, with potential resistance levels ahead if it tries to climb back.
Market data also reflects the stock's complex profile, with a Growth score of 22.49 and a Momentum score of 5.80, alongside negative price trends across short, medium, and long-term horizons. In other words, the stock has some work to do before it convinces investors the turnaround is real.
Price Action
C3.ai shares were flat at $15.01 at the time of publication on Thursday. The lack of movement suggests investors are taking a wait-and-see approach, digesting the promise of better execution against the reality of recent struggles.
The company's challenge now is to prove that the leadership transition and refocused strategy can deliver results. The demand for enterprise AI is there, according to Ehikian. The question is whether C3.ai can capitalize on it.