CRM

Salesforce Price

CRM
$180,18
+$2,02(+%1,13)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-27 23:00 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-27 23:00, Salesforce (CRM) is priced at $180,18, with a total market cap of $169,25B, a P/E ratio of 27,04, and a dividend yield of %0,94. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $177,50 and $184,25. The current price is %1,50 above the day's low and %2,20 below the day's high, with a trading volume of 10,76M. Over the past 52 weeks, CRM has traded between $163,56 to $296,05, and the current price is -%39,13 away from the 52-week high.

CRM Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$173,30
Market Cap$169,25B
Volume10,76M
P/E Ratio27,04
Dividend Yield (TTM)%0,94
Dividend Amount$0,44
Diluted EPS (TTM)7,97
Net Income (FY)$7,45B
Revenue (FY)$41,52B
Earnings Date2026-05-27
EPS Estimate3,12
Revenue Estimate$11,05B
Shares Outstanding976,63M
Beta (1Y)1.288
Ex-Dividend Date2026-04-09
Dividend Payment Date2026-04-23

About CRM

Salesforce, Inc. provides customer relationship management technology that brings companies and customers together worldwide. Its Customer 360 platform empowers its customers to work together to deliver connected experiences for their customers. The company's service offerings include Sales to store data, monitor leads and progress, forecast opportunities, gain insights through analytics and relationship intelligence, and deliver quotes, contracts, and invoices; and Service that enables companies to deliver trusted and highly personalized customer service and support at scale. Its service offerings also comprise flexible platform that enables companies of various sizes, locations, and industries to build business apps to bring them closer to their customers with drag-and-drop tools; online learning platform that allows anyone to learn in-demand Salesforce skills; and Slack, a system of engagement. In addition, the company's service offerings include Marketing offering that enables companies to plan, personalize, and optimize one-to-one customer marketing journeys; and Commerce offering, which empowers brands to unify the customer experience across mobile, web, social, and store commerce points. Further, its service offerings comprise Tableau, an end-to-end analytics solution serving various enterprise use cases; and MuleSoft, an integration offering that allows its customers to unlock data across their enterprise. The company provides its service offering for customers in financial services, healthcare and life sciences, manufacturing, and other industries. It also offers professional services; and in-person and online courses to certify its customers and partners on architecting, administering, deploying, and developing its service offerings. The company provides its services through direct sales; and consulting firms, systems integrators, and other partners. Salesforce, Inc. was incorporated in 1999 and is headquartered in San Francisco, California.
SectorTechnology
IndustrySoftware - Application
CEOMarc R. Benioff
HeadquartersSan Francisco,CA,US
Employees (FY)83,33K
Average Revenue (1Y)$498,29K
Net Income per Employee$89,48K

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Salesforce (CRM) is currently trading at $180,18, with a 24h change of +%1,13. The 52-week trading range is $163,56–$296,05.

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Hot Posts About Salesforce (CRM)

RunWhenCut

RunWhenCut

8 hours ago
I've been thinking a lot about how security systems work on large platforms, and honestly, Role-Based Access Control (RBAC) is something we should understand better. Basically, RBAC is a system where access to data depends on the role you have within an organization. It’s not complicated in theory: you assign permissions to a specific role, and then users who have that role automatically inherit those permissions. If someone changes positions, you simply change their role and that’s it—their permissions get updated. In large organizations, this is crucial because you’d drive the IT team crazy if you had to manage individual permissions for each person. Think of a hospital, for example. A nurse needs to be able to see patients’ medical records, but why would they have access to the hospital’s financial systems? Exactly—they don’t need it. With RBAC, the nurse’s role has specific access to certain data, and nothing more. The accounting department sees the numbers, but not the medical details. This isn’t just about efficiency—it’s pure security. What’s interesting is that you see RBAC implemented everywhere. Major cloud service providers like AWS and Azure use it to control who can access which resources. Enterprise management platforms (ERP), CRM systems, and even cryptocurrency exchanges all rely on RBAC to keep their operations secure. Any serious platform that handles sensitive data is using something similar. From a regulatory compliance standpoint, RBAC is almost mandatory today. Regulations like RGPD and HIPAA require controls to determine who can access confidential information. If you don’t have a robust access control system, you’re exposed to fines, data leaks, and reputational damage. For companies in finance, healthcare, and the public sector, this is especially critical. As an investor, this interests me because a company that implements RBAC and other sophisticated cybersecurity measures is mitigating significant risks. A data breach doesn’t just cost money in remediation—it also destroys customer trust. That’s why companies that take security seriously, including robust RBAC systems, tend to be better positioned in the long run. In summary, RBAC is fundamental. It’s not sexy or exciting, but it’s the foundation of any serious operation. From cryptocurrency platforms to hospitals, everyone depends on RBAC to keep their data secure and their operations efficient. If you work in technology or invest in tech companies, understanding how role-based access control works is practically essential.
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Deutscher

Deutscher

10 hours ago
My 3 biggest investing mistakes ever (learn from my mistakes): 1. Missing the Anthropic round at $67.5b in May 2025 ($100k would = $1.2m now - and that was just the minimum sizing) - I didn't even explicitly turn it down, it just got lost in my DMs (from a reputable source), and I ignored it. I wouldn't care if it was some random DM, but this person was trusted and even followed up twice. That blind spot is on me. 2. Not allocating more to equities or gold in 2024 (I played it too safe, keeping profits in stables instead of re-allocating) - cost me millions in opportunity cost. 3. Not taking enough profits on my shitcoins in November 2024! I thought I was taking profits, but I wasn't ruthless enough - I lost respect for money and learned a hard lesson (this alone cost me $3-5m). All 3 happened for different (and some overlapping) reasons. 1 = lack of organization, systems fault (fixed this since with PersonalOS/AI CRM tracking). 2 = mix of fear (scared of losing what I made, complacency (I didn't execute on my plan), and judgment (I over-weighted the crypto/equities correlation). 3 = complacency (there's some crossover with the prior 2 points) - I wasn't organized/desperate enough to lock in gains - partly due to overconfidence but also due to systems I think it's crucial that we all reflect on our losses and dive deep into WHY they happened. Or they will keep happening again. Something happening once is bad enough, but twice (if it's within your control) is idiotic. The great thing about AI is that it can fix a lot of this stuff (automated reporting alone would've solved a lot of this).
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