Valuation Divergence in Tech: Hardware's Resurgence vs. Software's Correction

Generado por agente de IAMarcus LeeRevisado porShunan Liu
viernes, 2 de enero de 2026, 12:30 pm ET1 min de lectura

The technology sector, long characterized by its rapid innovation cycles and volatile valuations, has entered a new phase of divergence between hardware and software segments. From 2023 to 2025, hardware and semiconductor firms have outperformed their software counterparts in valuation metrics, driven by AI-driven demand and tangible earnings, while software companies face a post-pandemic recalibration of expectations. This shift reflects deeper structural changes in business models, macroeconomic dynamics, and investor sentiment, offering critical insights for investors navigating the sector's evolving landscape.

Hardware's Rebound: Capitalizing on AI and Infrastructure Demand

Hardware and semiconductor companies have emerged as beneficiaries of the AI boom, with valuation multiples expanding despite the sector's traditionally capital-intensive nature. By 2025, EBITDA multiples for hardware firms ranged between 11.3x and 12.8x, while revenue multiples hit 3.4x-figures that outpace software segments like SaaS and cybersecurity, which

. This premium reflects the market's recognition of hardware's foundational role in enabling AI infrastructure. Global spending on data center systems, for instance, is , reaching $367 billion, as enterprises scramble to deploy AI-optimized servers and GPUs.

The sector's momentum is further underscored by forward-return estimates. Hardware stocks, particularly those tied to AI chips and cloud infrastructure, have

at higher rates than software and IT services. , a bellwether for the hardware space, . Meanwhile, from 2023 to 2028, driven by generative AI's insatiable demand for computational power.

Software's Valuation Correction: Profitability Over Hype

In contrast, software companies-once the darlings of the 2020s-have faced a sobering reality check.

, a sharp decline from the 6.7x peak in 2021. This correction aligns with a broader shift in investor priorities: cash flow and sustainable margins now outweigh speculative growth narratives. Private software companies, for example, in 2025, but their revenue multiples (2.0x) lagged behind hardware peers, signaling a preference for profitability over top-line expansion.

author avatar
Marcus Lee

Comentarios



Add a public comment...
Sin comentarios

Aún no hay comentarios