C3.ai Inc (NYSE: AI) opened about 15% higher today following reports the artificial intelligence firm may soon merge with the privately held “Automation Anywhere”.
Retail investors seem to be believe this deal may prove a turnaround for C3.ai, which has struggled with declining revenue that’s cut its valuation in half over the past year.
Despite today’s rally, C3.ai stock remains down nearly 60% versus its 52-week high.
Why Automation Anywhere’s news doesn’t warrant buying C3.ai stock
Despite initial excitement over a potential tie-up with Automation Anywhere, a closer look reveals this deal may be more of a “bailout” for C3.ai shares than a “breakthrough”.
According to The Information, the privately held company will acquire C3.ai to achieve a reverse-listing, effectively using the ticker as a back-door to the public markets.
This suggests AI’s current shareholders might face significant dilution, given the massive valuation gap between the two: Automation Anywhere was last valued at nearly $6.8 billion, while C3.ai’s market cap has withered to about $1.8 billion only.
Moreover, merging C3.ai’s high-level predictive artificial intelligence with Automation Anywhere’s legacy Robotic Process Automation (RPA) creates immense integration risk.
RPA is often viewed as a “band-aid” for old systems, which stands in stark contrast to C3.ai Inc’s vision of “modernizing” enterprise architecture.
All in all, with C3.ai already struggling with deepening losses and a persistent share price decline, doubling down on a complex, multi-billion-dollar integration could delay any path to profitability and distract from the company’s core “agentic AI” strategy.
C3.ai shares remain a very high-risk proposition for 2026
The fundamental bear case for C3.ai stock rests on a stark contradiction: the company is failing to grow during the greatest secular tailwind in software history.
While the broader AI sector is booming, the NYSE-listed firm’s revenue has entered a period of alarming instability.
In the first half of its fiscal 2026, C3.ai’s revenue plummeted roughly 20% year-over-year, forcing management to withdraw its full-year guidance – a move that typically signals a complete lack of visibility into the sales pipeline.
This “growth reversal” is compounded by a leadership vacuum following the retirement of founder Thomas Siebel, whose personal involvement was critical to closing the company’s signature lumpy multi-million dollar deals.
Financially, the company remains a “cash incinerator”, reporting a staggering GAAP net loss of over $380 million on a trailing twelve-month basis.
Despite an industry-wide push for profitability, C3.ai’s losses have actually widened, with margins squeezed by a pivot to a consumption-based pricing model that has yet to prove its scalability.
Valuation remains another major hurdle; even after a 60% share price collapse in 2025, C3 trades at a premium relative to its peers while delivering vastly inferior growth.
With intense competition from better-capitalized rivals like Palantir and cloud giants providing their own native AI layers, C3.ai risks becoming a “zombie” stock – possessing the right name and ticker, but lacking the operational muscle to survive the consolidation of the enterprise AI market.
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