SAP shares clawed back some ground on Wednesday, rising 4.37 percent to close at €140.84, but the relief rally masks a deeper tension. The stock remains 47 percent below its July 2025 high of €266.00 and is trying to find its footing just two weeks after hitting a 52-week low of €130.80. With a second-quarter earnings report due on July 23, the market is weighing a sweeping internal reorganization, a pending acquisition, and a critical security flaw.
The most immediate strategic move is SAP’s plan to buy data specialist Dremio. The transaction, expected to close in the third quarter of 2026, aims to strengthen the technical foundation for future artificial intelligence applications. The deal follows the June launch of new AI assistants that dig deeper into customer business processes than earlier tools, and it aligns with CEO Christian Klein’s push to embed intelligent capabilities into core enterprise workflows.
Klein is not leaving that push to chance. Under a restructuring program code-named “Fuji,” he has taken direct operational control of the Business Suite and transaction platform — the company’s central product development areas. Product development chief Muhammad Alam will hand over his responsibilities immediately and leave when his contract expires in March 2027. At the same time, Chief Operating Officer Sebastian Steinhäuser will lead a newly formed “Industrial AI” unit focused on intelligent tools for industry customers.
The urgency behind the shake-up is evident in a survey by consultancy Horváth, which found that roughly 65 percent of current SAP transformations contain defects. To address that, SAP is rebranding its development environment as an “Agent-Led Toolchain” covering products such as Signavio, Cloud ALM, LeanIX and WalkMe, with automated systems intended to enforce process quality. Yet a fresh headache has emerged: the security vulnerability CVE-2026-44748, rated 9.9 out of 10 — an extremely critical score. SAP must patch the flaw quickly to maintain customer trust in the revamped architecture.
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While Klein reorganizes the shop floor, the company is also deploying financial firepower to stabilize the stock. The second tranche of SAP’s share buyback program, worth €2.6 billion, is running through the end of July. That coincides with the quiet period ahead of the quarterly numbers — the first hard test of whether the “Fuji” changes and the Dremio deal are already showing operational traction.
The technical picture remains fragile. The stock trades below its 50-day moving average of €146.61 and far below the 200-day average of €181.99. The relative strength index sits at 48.3, indicating neither overbought nor oversold conditions, but annualized volatility of 46.07 percent points to severe investor jitters.
Away from the headlines, the core cloud business continues to grind forward. SAP is integrating new carbon-accounting features into its suite in the current second quarter, and large migration projects such as Nokia’s ERP move to Microsoft Azure demonstrate sustained demand. Klein now has to prove that flattening the hierarchy produces the measurable efficiency gains in product development that the market demands.
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