Globant Stock Hits Its Lowest Since 2017, Even as It Sponsors the World Cup

By The Rio Times | Created at 2026-06-22 16:31:31 | Updated at 2026-06-22 18:29:34 2 hours ago

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Markets · Technology

Key Facts

The slump. Globant shares have fallen to about $30.74, their lowest level since 2017.

The irony. The company is a tech sponsor of the FIFA World Cup 2026, its biggest-ever showcase.

The company. Globant is an Argentine-founded software firm listed in New York, with clients like Google and Santander.

The first pressure. A wider selloff in tech services on fears that artificial intelligence will eat into demand.

The second pressure. US securities lawsuits alleging the firm misled investors over its Latin American business.

The stakes. A marquee sponsorship is no shield when investors doubt the underlying growth story.

The Globant stock slide is a sharp reminder that a glamorous World Cup sponsorship counts for little when the market has turned against a company’s core business.

Globant stock has fallen to its lowest since 2017 despite its FIFA World Cup 2026 sponsorshipGlobant, a World Cup 2026 tech sponsor, has seen its shares slide to a multi-year low. (Photo internet reproduction)

You might expect a company splashed across the biggest sporting event on the planet to be having a good year. For one Latin American tech firm, the opposite is true.

Globant is an official technology supporter of the FIFA World Cup 2026, yet its shares have just sunk to their lowest level since 2017. The showcase has not put a floor under the stock.

Why Globant stock is falling

First, some background. Globant is a software and digital-services company founded in Argentina and listed in New York, with blue-chip clients that include Google and Santander.

Its shares recently traded around $30.74, a level not seen in roughly nine years. Two forces are dragging it down at the same time.

The first is a broad selloff across the tech-services sector. Investors worry that artificial intelligence will automate much of the coding work that firms like Globant sell, shrinking future demand.

The second is closer to home. Several American law firms have filed securities class-action lawsuits accusing Globant of misleading investors about the health of its Latin American operations.

Those suits cover the period from early 2024 to mid-2025. They add a fresh worry about disclosure and potential legal costs on top of the demand fears already weighing on the stock.

The two pressures feed each other. Slowing growth makes investors more sensitive to any governance question, while the lawsuits make them more cautious about the growth outlook.

The fall has been steep and prolonged. The shares now sit far below the highs of recent years, even as the company keeps signing marquee clients and expanding its artificial-intelligence offering.

The World Cup that could not save the Globant stock

On paper, the timing should have helped. Globant signed an expanded deal to supply technology to FIFA, building apps and digital platforms for the 2026 tournament and the 2027 Women’s World Cup.

Such deals are usually prized. A World Cup association puts a company’s brand in front of billions of viewers and is meant to showcase its products to potential corporate clients.

But sponsorships do not move earnings much. The contract is modest next to Globant’s overall revenue, and it does nothing to answer the deeper question investors are asking about growth.

That is the real lesson here. Marketing shine cannot offset a market convinced that a company’s core business faces slower growth and rising legal risk.

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Why the Globant stock story matters

For investors, Globant has become a test case for a bigger question. It is one of the clearest examples of an AI-services firm caught between selling automation and being disrupted by it.

The bull case still exists. Some analysts argue the selloff is overdone and that the company’s AI platforms and subscription products could revive growth if demand stabilises.

The bears are not convinced. They see slowing revenue, margin pressure and the legal overhang as reasons the cheap-looking shares could stay cheap for some time.

The forward signal is the order book. Whether bookings and usage of Globant’s AI products stabilise will decide if the World Cup year ends as a turning point or just another low.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is Globant stock falling?

Two forces are weighing on it at once. A broad selloff in tech-services firms over fears that artificial intelligence will reduce demand, and US securities lawsuits alleging Globant misled investors about its Latin American operations.

Is Globant connected to the World Cup?

It is, as an official technology supporter of the FIFA World Cup 2026 and the 2027 Women’s World Cup, building apps and digital platforms. The sponsorship has not stopped its shares sliding to a multi-year low.

What is Globant?

Globant is a software and digital-services company founded in Argentina and listed in New York. It works for major firms including Google and Santander, and has built its recent strategy around artificial intelligence products.

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