On March 11, Salesforce executed its most ambitious bond offering to date, issuing $25 billion in senior notes with a singular objective: repurchasing company shares.
Salesforce, Inc., CRM
The enterprise software giant immediately entered into accelerated share repurchase (ASR) agreements following the pricing announcement, allocating all $25 billion toward equity buybacks. The first tranche of shares is scheduled for delivery on March 16, while the offering closes two days earlier on March 13.
This represents a decisive commitment to returning capital to shareholders — executed at an unprecedented scale.
The transaction significantly eclipses Salesforce’s prior debt milestone of $9 billion, which financed its 2021 Slack acquisition. Unlike that deal, this latest issuance isn’t backing an acquisition or new product development — it’s purely focused on reducing outstanding shares.
Leading the transaction are J.P. Morgan, Bank of America, Barclays, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo, serving as joint book-running managers. The company has submitted a registration statement and preliminary prospectus supplement to the SEC.
CRM shares advanced 3.57% on announcement day, closing at $194.13 with a market capitalization hovering near $178.81 billion.
Bond market participants didn’t exactly rush to embrace the offering. Buyers insisted on elevated yields compared to Salesforce’s previous debt issuances.
The 10-year segment carried a spread of approximately 1.35 percentage points above comparable U.S. Treasury securities — substantially wider than the company’s 2021 pricing levels. This spread expansion signals investor hesitation.
Two primary factors seem to underpin this wariness: firstly, Salesforce is leveraging debt purely for shareholder returns rather than business expansion; secondly, lingering questions about artificial intelligence’s potential impact on enterprise software revenue streams.
Nevertheless, the offering was successfully executed. Institutional buyers — including pension funds, insurance companies, and asset management firms — remain eager for investment-grade yield opportunities, and Salesforce’s solid credit standing provided an attractive option.
The bond announcement coincided with several Wall Street firms adjusting their price projections.
Truist Securities preserved its Buy recommendation while lowering its price target from $380 to $280. The firm cited valuation concerns and observed that fourth-quarter performance demonstrated steadiness but relatively modest subscription and support revenue expansion.
Stifel similarly maintained its Buy stance while reducing its forecast from $300 to $250. The firm highlighted challenges in Tableau, Marketing Cloud, and Commerce Cloud segments, though recognized encouraging progress in emerging product lines.
Cantor Fitzgerald retained its Overweight rating at a $300 target, characterizing fiscal 2026 performance as respectable. Company executives expressed optimism about accelerating growth in the latter portion of the fiscal year, referencing favorable trends in net new annual order value.
The $25 billion issuance falls within the investment-grade corporate bond segment and exemplifies what market watchers call an “evolved corporate strategy” — leveraging debt to boost shareholder returns rather than financing operational expansion.
CRM holds a Zacks #3 (Hold) rating. Shares traded up 3.57% when the announcement was made public.
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