Best software stocks 2026, scored against 7 investor frameworks
Ten enterprise software names ranked by Buffett, Graham, Fisher, Lynch, Greenblatt, Munger, and Smith. Recurring revenue economics, AI exposure, and the per-ticker verdict.
Last reviewed: · Educational only. Not investment advice.
Software is the most ROCE-friendly sector in the equity market. Recurring revenue with low marginal cost compounds in ways no industrial business can match. Terry Smith's framework was effectively designed for this category. The challenge in 2026 is that the valuation gap between great software franchises and average ones has rarely been wider. Multiples on the best names (MSFT, INTU, SNPS) have stretched on the AI tailwind, while the rest of the SaaS complex compresses on rate sensitivity. Cross-framework discipline matters more than ever.
The list below applies the seven investor frameworks invest-like uses on every ticker. Software names tend to pass Buffett, Munger, Smith, and Fisher when the moat is real, and fail Graham almost universally on multiple. The all-pass bar is structurally hard in software; what matters is whether the moat-quality pillars and the cheapness pillar both register. Reads come from the same documented methodology that powers per-ticker pages on the platform.
01
MSFTMicrosoft
The largest enterprise software franchise globally, with Azure, Office 365, Dynamics, and an effective monopoly on enterprise productivity.
Buffett, Munger, Smith, and Fisher all pass it strongly: the moat in Office and Windows is extraordinary, Azure is the cleanest hyperscaler ROI story, and capital allocation is best-in-class. Lynch struggles on PEG at premium multiples. Graham fails on cheapness.
Frameworks that pass
Buffett
Munger
Smith
Fisher
Greenblatt
Frameworks that fail
Graham
Lynch (PEG)
Key risk to know
AI capex digestion. Azure data-center spend is multi-year, and any meaningful slowdown in OpenAI workloads or in enterprise AI adoption hits the highest-margin growth driver.
Enterprise database and applications franchise, with OCI gaining real hyperscaler traction and an AI infrastructure narrative.
Greenblatt picks it up on ROIC. Lynch likes the OCI growth story and the PEG. Buffett's framework is mixed on the OCI capital intensity. Graham fails on leverage and multiple. Smith fails on the capital intensity. Munger is positive on the franchise but skeptical of the AI capex commitment.
Frameworks that pass
Greenblatt
Lynch
Buffett (legacy moat)
Frameworks that fail
Smith
Graham
Key risk to know
OCI capex sustainability. The OCI buildout requires multi-year spend; the bull case requires customer ramps that justify it.
Creative software franchise with Photoshop, Lightroom, Premiere, and Acrobat, plus the Experience Cloud marketing-tech stack.
Buffett and Munger pass on the moat (creative-pro switching costs are real). Smith passes on ROCE and low capital intensity. Fisher likes the R&D efficiency. Lynch is fine with the story. Graham fails on multiple. Greenblatt is borderline.
Frameworks that pass
Buffett
Munger
Smith
Fisher
Frameworks that fail
Graham
Key risk to know
Generative AI substitution. Open-source and lower-cost generative tools threaten the value capture in creative workflows.
Largest enterprise CRM franchise, with growing AI agent (Agentforce) layer and an extensive partner ecosystem.
Lynch passes on PEG. Buffett's framework reads the moat positively. Greenblatt picks it up on Magic Formula. Smith is mixed on margin expansion progress. Graham fails on multiple. Munger is cautious on the post-Slack-Tableau capital allocation track record.
Frameworks that pass
Lynch
Buffett
Greenblatt
Frameworks that fail
Graham
Munger
Key risk to know
Agent monetization. The bull case assumes Agentforce drives a step-function in ARPA; if conversion lags, the multiple compresses.
Dominant US small-business and consumer financial software franchise (TurboTax, QuickBooks, Credit Karma, Mailchimp).
Buffett, Munger, and Smith pass it strongly: the TurboTax and QuickBooks moats are deep, and the ROCE profile is among the best in software. Fisher passes on R&D and capital allocation. Graham fails on multiple. Lynch is borderline. Greenblatt is mixed.
Frameworks that pass
Buffett
Munger
Smith
Fisher
Frameworks that fail
Graham
Key risk to know
Government direct-file expansion. The IRS Direct File expansion is the secular threat to the TurboTax franchise, even if the near-term impact is small.
Enterprise IT service-management and workflow platform with real share gains in HR, customer-service, and AI workflow.
Fisher and Smith pass on growth quality and ROCE. Buffett's framework reads the moat positively. Munger is positive on the management. Lynch likes the story at PEG. Graham fails. Greenblatt is mixed.
Frameworks that pass
Fisher
Smith
Buffett
Munger
Lynch
Frameworks that fail
Graham
Key risk to know
AI premium-tier conversion. The bull case assumes Pro Plus AI adoption drives durable ARPA expansion; conversion is the key metric.
Largest EDA chip-design software franchise, with the Ansys acquisition extending into simulation.
Buffett, Munger, Smith, and Fisher all pass it: EDA is one of the cleanest duopoly moats in technology. Greenblatt picks it up on ROIC. Graham fails on multiple. Lynch is fine with the story but the PEG is full.
Frameworks that pass
Buffett
Munger
Smith
Fisher
Greenblatt
Frameworks that fail
Graham
Lynch (PEG)
Key risk to know
Ansys integration. The acquisition is the largest in SNPS history and the synergy realization defines the next three years.
The other half of the EDA duopoly with Synopsys, with growing exposure to AI silicon and chip-design verification.
Same profile as SNPS: Buffett, Munger, Smith, Fisher all pass. Greenblatt picks it up on ROIC. Graham fails on multiple. Lynch is full on PEG. The duopoly structure is the moat.
Frameworks that pass
Buffett
Munger
Smith
Fisher
Greenblatt
Frameworks that fail
Graham
Lynch (PEG)
Key risk to know
Customer concentration. Both EDA names depend on a small number of large foundry and fabless customers; any consolidation reshuffles the share.
Simulation software franchise, in the process of being acquired by Synopsys (transaction announced 2024, regulatory review ongoing).
Pre-merger, Buffett and Munger pass on the moat. Smith and Fisher pass on ROCE and R&D. Graham fails on multiple. Lynch is fine with the deal-arb story. Greenblatt is mixed.
Frameworks that pass
Buffett
Munger
Smith
Fisher
Frameworks that fail
Graham
Key risk to know
Deal close timing. The Synopsys acquisition is the primary near-term variance driver; closing dynamics determine the framework read.
Diversified vertical software roll-up with high-ROIC niche-software businesses across healthcare, network, and information businesses.
Buffett, Munger, Smith, and Fisher all pass it: the niche-software roll-up model produces some of the highest ROCE in the software complex. Greenblatt picks it up on Magic Formula. Graham fails on multiple. Lynch is fine with the story.
Frameworks that pass
Buffett
Munger
Smith
Fisher
Greenblatt
Frameworks that fail
Graham
Key risk to know
Acquisition pipeline. The roll-up model requires consistent quality M&A; the bull case assumes management continues to allocate well.
The ten names above were drawn from the largest US-listed enterprise software franchises by market capitalization, prioritizing companies with established commercial monetization and the deepest coverage on invest-like. Pre-profit hyper-growers were excluded. The seven frameworks are documented at the methodology page.
The all-pass consensus signal is benchmarked over five years against the S&P 500 at the benchmarks page. Software names rarely hit the all-seven bar because Graham almost universally fails on multiple; the relevant sector signal is 5-of-7 or 6-of-7 with the Graham failure being expected. Educational only, never investment advice.
Frequently asked questions
How were these 10 software stocks selected?
From the largest US-listed enterprise software franchises by market capitalization, weighted toward names with the deepest coverage on invest-like and the most documented moats.
Why is no pure SaaS hyper-grower on the list?
Hyper-growers (DDOG, NET, CRWD, etc.) almost universally fail Graham and often fail Greenblatt because multiples leave no margin of safety. They are tracked individually on invest-like but rarely pass the cross-framework consensus while they are still pricing in extreme growth.
What are the seven investor frameworks?
Buffett, Graham, Fisher, Lynch, Greenblatt, Munger, and Smith. Full definitions are at the methodology page.
Why does Smith pass software so often?
Software is the structurally cleanest sector for Terry Smith's ROCE-and-low-capital-intensity framework. Recurring revenue plus minimal capex compounds in ways no other industry can match.
Are these buy recommendations?
No. This is educational analysis only.
How often is this list updated?
Per-ticker scoring updates daily. This listicle is reviewed quarterly.
Where can I see the full Buffett verdict on each name?
Each entry links to /buffett/[ticker]/ where the full five-pillar verdict is written out.
Educational only. Nothing on this page constitutes investment advice. Framework reads represent the opinion of invest-like. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Best software stocks 2026, scored against 7 investor frameworks · invest-like