Morgan Stanley has issued a research report downgrading its rating on the US IT services industry from "neutral" to "cautious," citing concerns that accelerated artificial intelligence (AI) investments may lead to declining return on invested capital (ROIC). The investment bank maintains its "hold" rating on Accenture PLC (ACN.US) ahead of the company's fourth quarter fiscal 2025 earnings release, while cutting its target price from $325 to $271.
Morgan Stanley's downgrade of the US IT services industry to "cautious" is primarily driven by several factors: AI investments are crowding out IT services budgets, intensifying pricing pressures, and diluting returns on investment. Most investors align with this view due to ongoing threats from generative AI and have already reduced their exposure to US IT services stocks.
The investment bank notes that many investors believe there are currently no clear catalysts to reignite growth momentum in the sector. However, Morgan Stanley considers company forecasts reasonable, supporting its "hold" ratings on sector stocks.
The report outlines three key questions with corresponding viewpoints:
**Question 1:** Do IT services companies have advantages over software companies in developing proprietary intellectual property (IP)?
**Morgan Stanley's View:** Software companies hold greater advantages. Software firms are better positioned to provide interim AI solutions and are gradually taking on work previously handled by IT services companies. This competitive edge is further strengthened by accelerated budget growth in the software sector, enabling companies to invest more capital in building new capacity. Software vendors can also integrate software and services into comprehensive offerings, providing more cost-effective alternatives for clients. Therefore, Morgan Stanley believes IT services companies must accelerate their investment pace to remain competitive.
**Question 2:** How significant is the impact of generative AI on the IT services industry?
**Morgan Stanley's View:** Reduced discretionary spending is likely the primary driver of price competition. IT services companies are pre-committing to efficiency gains from generative AI without mature frameworks to win contracts, exposing them to execution and technical risks of failing to deliver on promises.
**Question 3:** Will LLM developers rely on IT services companies to bridge funding gaps?
**Morgan Stanley's View:** No. LLM developers are currently focused on improving model performance and driving product differentiation, relegating IT services partnerships focused on product promotion to secondary priority. Stable venture capital funding allows LLM developers to concentrate on winning new customers while alleviating near-term cash burn concerns.
Regarding Accenture PLC specifically, investors remain cautious ahead of the company's latest quarterly earnings release, as fiscal 2026 guidance may disappoint. Morgan Stanley maintains its forecast of 5% revenue growth for Accenture PLC's fiscal 2026, but has significantly reduced the valuation multiple from 24x to 20x due to pessimistic industry outlook, resulting in the target price cut from $325 to $271.
Accenture PLC is scheduled to report fourth quarter fiscal 2025 earnings on September 25, with market expectations of $17.33 billion in revenue and earnings per share of $2.97.
As of Tuesday's US market close, Accenture PLC fell 0.45% to $236.81. The stock has declined 32% year-to-date.