ERP Software
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All Stocks (36)
| Company | Market Cap | Price |
|---|---|---|
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MSFT
Microsoft Corporation
Dynamics 365 includes ERP functionality as part of MSFT's enterprise software offerings.
|
$3.51T |
$474.96
+0.60%
|
|
ORCL
Oracle Corporation
ERP Software is a major enterprise application serving finance, supply chain, and operations.
|
$558.28B |
$200.45
+0.85%
|
|
SAP
SAP SE
Core product: SAP's ERP software suite (S/4HANA Cloud) for finance, procurement, supply chain, and HR.
|
$275.99B |
$238.41
+0.72%
|
|
SHOP
Shopify Inc.
Shopify offers integrated back-office functions (inventory, orders, fulfillment) akin to an ERP for merchants.
|
$190.92B |
$156.08
+5.60%
|
|
INTU
Intuit Inc.
ERP Software; SMB financial management and accounting capabilities.
|
$184.89B |
$654.68
-1.28%
|
|
ADP
Automatic Data Processing, Inc.
ERP Software coverage via integrated HR/payroll processes within enterprise software.
|
$102.52B |
$249.71
-1.35%
|
|
WDAY
Workday, Inc.
ERP Software represents Workday's integrated finance and HR planning functionality as an ERP cloud platform.
|
$60.11B |
$227.92
+1.23%
|
|
PAYX
Paychex, Inc.
ERP Software; broader enterprise resource planning capabilities including HR/payroll modules within Paychex platform.
|
$40.15B |
$109.70
-1.58%
|
|
CTSH
Cognizant Technology Solutions Corporation
Cognizant implements and integrates ERP software solutions as part of its enterprise transformation offerings.
|
$37.11B |
$75.45
-0.69%
|
|
LEN
Lennar Corporation
Two-year ERP transition (JD Edwards E1) to modernize financial/operational processes.
|
$31.90B |
$123.09
-0.05%
|
|
TYL
Tyler Technologies, Inc.
The article references an enterprise ERP application as part of Tyler's integrated government software suite.
|
$20.45B |
$453.69
-4.04%
|
|
GIB
CGI Inc.
Momentum ERP and other ERP software solutions constitute CGI's major software product offering.
|
$19.60B |
$87.98
+0.35%
|
|
CDW
CDW Corporation
CDW resells and implements ERP software solutions for businesses.
|
$18.37B |
$140.73
+0.38%
|
|
TTAN
ServiceTitan, Inc.
ERP capabilities integrated with FSM/CRM workflows for contractor businesses.
|
$7.87B |
$88.21
+1.68%
|
|
OS
OneStream, Inc. Class A Common Stock
ERP-like features (planning, consolidation, reporting) within an enterprise software suite.
|
$4.87B |
$20.14
+0.42%
|
|
KGS
Kodiak Gas Services, Inc.
rolled out an ERP system, indicating enterprise software/application usage to manage operations.
|
$2.94B |
$33.47
-0.07%
|
|
AIR
AAR Corp.
Trax is a cloud-based MRO ERP software platform, representing direct ERP software offerings.
|
$2.78B |
$79.56
+2.41%
|
|
BLKB
Blackbaud, Inc.
Financial Edge NXT provides fund accounting and financial management, effectively nonprofit ERP.
|
$2.74B |
$54.80
-2.99%
|
|
FORTY
Formula Systems (1985) Ltd.
ERP-style software capabilities via Sapiens modules and financials.
|
$2.29B |
N/A
|
|
EVCM
EverCommerce Inc.
Platform includes back-office functions (lead management, scheduling, dispatch, invoicing) implying ERP-like capabilities within a vertical SaaS stack.
|
$1.52B |
$8.45
+0.90%
|
|
SDHC
Smith Douglas Homes Corp.
Develops and uses a proprietary ERP software platform (SMART Builder) to manage construction and operations.
|
$895.80M |
$17.78
+2.13%
|
|
IIIV
i3 Verticals, Inc.
The company provides ERP-like software capabilities (licensing, permitting, e-filing, court/ERP solutions) for public sector agencies.
|
$772.43M |
$24.15
+0.88%
|
|
KFS
Kingsway Financial Services Inc.
Viewpoint provides ERP-like software for construction/vertical markets, aligning with ERP software.
|
$372.47M |
$12.72
-1.40%
|
|
CCRN
Cross Country Healthcare, Inc.
ERP Software captures CCRN's ERP system implementation and the related operational efficiencies expected from phase 2.
|
$367.26M |
$10.96
-2.23%
|
|
FGPR
Ferrellgas Partners, L.P.
ERP software implementation for enterprise resource planning and operations.
|
$325.60M |
$17.60
|
|
ATGL
Alpha Technology Group Limited
Custom ERP software for enterprise resource planning implemented via NSL.
|
$308.30M |
$22.76
+12.67%
|
|
ECXJ
CXJ Group Co., Limited
Proprietary ERP software platform for store operations, inventory control and CRM.
|
$191.81M |
$1.87
|
|
SEAT
Vivid Seats Inc.
ERP Software tag reflects Skybox ERP used by a majority of professional sellers.
|
$81.44M |
$7.72
-2.53%
|
|
IOTR
iOThree Limited Ordinary Shares
ERP Software category reflecting enterprise resource planning components like PMS maintenance systems.
|
$78.38M |
$3.29
+9.83%
|
|
SNTW
Summit Networks Inc.
ERP Software integration as part of enterprise digital transformation services.
|
$17.70M |
$0.26
|
|
TBTC
Table Trac, Inc.
CasinoTrac CMS includes administration, accounting, and operational management features that resemble ERP-type functionality.
|
$17.58M |
$3.79
|
|
EHGO
Eshallgo Inc. Class A Ordinary Shares
The company developed a proprietary ERP system used to manage contracts, orders, and operations.
|
$6.62M |
$0.31
+2.72%
|
|
WCT
Wellchange Holdings Company Limited
MR. CLOUD provides ERP functionality (finance, procurement, inventory, etc.).
|
$4.96M |
$0.24
+1.49%
|
|
LGCB
Linkage Global Inc Ordinary Shares
The Linkage ERP System constitutes ERP software for integrated operations, finance, and logistics.
|
$4.51M |
$2.08
-0.95%
|
|
EPWK
EPWK Holdings Ltd.
ERP Software is a core component of Premium Business Solutions.
|
$756719 |
$1.40
-11.39%
|
|
LNBY
Lanbay Inc
LNBY develops ERP software as part of its end-to-end technology solutions for clients.
|
$333000 |
$0.01
|
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# Executive Summary
* The ERP software industry is undergoing a profound transformation driven by the rapid integration of Artificial Intelligence, which is becoming the primary basis for competition and a key driver of new, high-margin revenue streams.
* This AI-driven innovation is enabled by the ongoing shift to cloud-native SaaS models, which provide the scalable architecture for AI and shift vendor revenues to more predictable, recurring streams.
* The competitive landscape is intensifying, characterized by a battle between hyperscale infrastructure providers, established application leaders, and nimble, vertical-specific specialists.
* Industry growth remains robust, with consensus forecasts pointing to a CAGR of approximately 10-11%, though near-term performance may be tempered by macroeconomic headwinds causing increased deal scrutiny.
* Leaders are differentiating through proprietary data sets that fuel superior AI, deep vertical expertise, and massive capital investments in next-generation cloud infrastructure.
## Key Trends & Outlook
The ERP software industry's primary growth engine and competitive battleground is now Artificial Intelligence. Vendors are embedding AI to automate workflows and deliver quantifiable ROI, moving beyond features to core business model evolution. This allows for direct monetization and significant pricing power, as seen with Workday's Recruiting Agent, which increases the average selling price by approximately 150%. The value proposition is compelling for customers, with users of ServiceTitan's AI tools seeing a 22% increase in close rates. This AI race is fueled by massive capital investment in data center infrastructure, with Oracle projecting $35 billion in capital expenditures for FY2026 and Microsoft committing $34.9 billion in Q1 FY26, primarily for GPUs, CPUs, and data center sites.
The transition from on-premise software to cloud-native SaaS platforms is a critical prerequisite for AI integration and is unlocking significant financial value. Companies successfully migrating customers see a material uplift in recurring revenue, as exemplified by Tyler Technologies, which realizes a 1.7 to 1.8 times increase in annual recurring revenue (ARR) per conversion. This strategic pivot, successfully executed by giants like SAP, whose cloud revenue now accounts for half of its total, solidifies long-term, predictable growth and higher valuation multiples.
The largest opportunity lies in developing vertical-specific AI agents that solve high-value, industry-specific problems, creating deep competitive moats and strong pricing power. The primary risk is macroeconomic uncertainty, which is extending sales cycles and increasing budget scrutiny, potentially tempering the strong growth outlook in the near term.
## Competitive Landscape
The ERP software market is fragmented, with Oracle leading with a 6.5% market share in 2024, followed closely by SAP. However, the industry is not a true oligopoly, and competition occurs on two main fronts: broad, integrated platforms versus specialized, best-of-breed solutions.
Some of the largest players, like Oracle and Microsoft, compete by controlling the entire technology stack, from the underlying data centers to the end-user application. This full-stack approach allows for significant economies of scale in data center build-out and the ability to optimize the entire stack for performance, particularly for AI workloads. Oracle's strategy centers on its Gen 2 Cloud Infrastructure, which it claims offers superior price-performance for AI, and its Fusion Cloud ERP applications. Its projected $35 billion in FY26 capital expenditures is direct evidence of this model.
Other firms find success by focusing on deep expertise in a specific business function or industry vertical. Workday, for example, has built its leadership position on a singular platform for HR and finance, leveraging its unparalleled dataset in this domain to build a competitive moat in AI. Its 98% gross retention rate shows the stickiness of this specialized model. Similarly, ServiceTitan has done the same for the trades industry, offering an end-to-end cloud-based platform.
The key competitive battleground is AI. The winners will be those who can best leverage their unique data assets—whether broad enterprise data from the full-stack players or deep, contextualized data from the vertical specialists—to deliver tangible business outcomes.
## Financial Performance
Revenue growth in the ERP software industry is strong and bifurcated, directly correlated to a company's success in the cloud and AI transition. High-growth vertical specialists, such as ServiceTitan, exemplify this trend with a 25% year-over-year revenue increase in Q2 FY26. Meanwhile, established giants like SAP demonstrate the success of a large-scale transformation, achieving double-digit total revenue growth in Q2 2025, driven by a 30% expansion in its Cloud ERP Suite for 14 consecutive quarters.
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Profitability patterns show a divergence in margins based on business model maturity and investment cycles. Workday, a mature cloud-native leader, exemplifies the high profitability potential of the SaaS model at scale, reporting a 30.2% non-GAAP operating margin in Q1 FY26. In contrast, companies making massive infrastructure investments, such as Oracle, show margin pressure as they prioritize market capture and R&D/CapEx spending to fuel future growth, with its GAAP operating income increasing but margin slightly decreasing in Q1 FY26.
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Capital allocation in the industry reflects a strategic race to build AI dominance, with a clear split between aggressive organic investment in AI infrastructure and strategic, capability-driven M&A. Microsoft's staggering $34.9 billion in capital expenditures in Q1 FY26, primarily for AI, is the ultimate proof point of this investment arms race. Companies also use M&A surgically to acquire new technology or market access, as demonstrated by Workday's approximately $1.1 billion acquisition of Sana to enhance its AI capabilities.
The industry's balance sheet position is generally robust due to strong cash flow from recurring revenue models. However, the immense cost of building AI data centers is leading infrastructure players to take on significant, dedicated debt. Oracle, for instance, secured an $18 billion project-finance loan for a new data-center campus, highlighting how the AI arms race is impacting balance sheets, even for established, cash-rich companies.
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