Workday's stock falls as CEO change sounds like 'really bad news' to this analyst

Dow Jones
Feb 10

MW Workday's stock falls as CEO change sounds like 'really bad news' to this analyst

By Hannah Pedone

Investor sentiment toward software stocks is low, and now Workday is replacing a CEO who was known for having good sales relationships

Workday is reinstating a past CEO as it embarks on "one of the most pivotal moments in our history."

Workday has announced that its co-founder and CEO, Craig Eschenbach, is stepping down. And investors aren't happy about it.

The stock is down 6% in Monday's midday trading.

The software company for payroll and human resources said the move comes as the business enters a "next chapter" focused on "leading in the rapidly evolving artificial-intelligence era," according to a press release. Aneel Bhusri, another co-founder and the current executive chair, will replace Eschenbach.

"We're now entering one of the most pivotal moments in our history," Bhusri said in a release. He previously served as Workday's (WDAY) CEO from 2014 to 2020 and was co-CEO from 2020 to 2024.

The transition isn't sitting well on Wall Street, however, with Mizuho trading-desk analyst Jordan Klein calling the changeover "really bad news."

Don't miss: Software stocks have been crushed. Here's how to play the sector as the dust settles.

"Eschenbach was liked and had a solid reputation [for] executing a plan and delivering results," Klein said in a note to clients.

He added that Eschenbach was a "sales leader" and had a "strong presence with customers," which he deemed more important than having a focus on research and development. Eschenbach had been given the CEO role as part of a plan to expand the company's presence beyond human-resources functions like payroll and talent management and into financials and other markets.

Workday's stock has been punished over the last year, falling 44% amid investor anxiety over the software sector's ability to monetize AI.

Evercore ISI analyst Kirk Materne said in a note that, while Bhusri is a familiar face, it will take a lot of "handholding" along with "consistent execution" around the company's AI strategy before investors would warm to the stock again.

See also: Software ate the world. Now, Wall Street is worried AI will eat software.

"Any benefits from a shareholder perspective from this transition are going to take some time," he said.

He did see a silver lining: "If there is a positive for Mr. Bhusri as he retakes the CEO role, it's that sentiment towards Workday is pretty much at an all-time low."

Bhusri will take over as CEO immediately. Eschenbach will continue to support him as an adviser.

-Hannah Pedone

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February 09, 2026 12:29 ET (17:29 GMT)

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