When a stock that everyone had faith in begins to fall below a round number, a certain kind of dread descends upon a trading floor. That amount is $100 for Shopify. On May 13, 2026, the stock closed at $99.84, barely hanging on like a person clinging to a ledge. It’s the kind of thing that causes even devoted Christians to take stock of their possessions.
Shopify has long been one of those businesses that seemed virtually untouchable. Retailers adored it. On it, developers built. Investors swarmed in. Not a long time ago, in October of last year, the stock reached $182.19. However, following the Q1 2026 earnings call, there was a change that felt more structural than seasonal. Strong revenue of $3.17 billion exceeded analyst projections and grew by over 34% year over year. That would be a celebration under normal conditions. Rather, in just one session, the stock dropped by almost 7%. That makes a statement.
| Company Profile: Shopify Inc. | Values |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Shopify Inc. |
| Ticker Symbol | NASDAQ: SHOP / TSX: SHOP |
| Founded | 2006 |
| Headquarters | Ottawa, Ontario, Canada |
| CEO | Tobias Lütke |
| Market Cap | 129.56 Billion USD |
| Q1 2026 Revenue | $3.17 Billion (+34.32% YoY) |
| 52-Week High | $182.19 |
| 52-Week Low | $98.56 |
| Current Stock Price | $99.84 USD (as of May 13, 2026) |
| P/E Ratio | 98.09 |
| Free Cash Flow (TTM) | $2.1 Billion |
| Net Loss Q1 2026 | $581 Million |
| US E-Commerce Market Share | Over 14% |
| GMV Managed | $1.6 Trillion+ across 175+ countries |
| Next Earnings Call | Expected August 5, 2026 |
Investors were not alarmed by the top line. It was the guidance that followed the $581 million net loss. With operating costs predicted to consume 35 to 36 percent of revenue, management issued a warning about lower gross margins in Q2. The projected $145 million in stock-based compensation did not improve the atmosphere either. Since the net loss is partially related to Shopify’s logistics business sale, which is a one-time event by nature, it’s possible that some of this is transitional. However, markets are more concerned with trends than with explanations.
It’s difficult to ignore how drastically the conversation has changed as you watch this develop. Investors were happy to allow Shopify to make large expenditures a year ago because they believed that the revenue momentum would eventually result in something more long-lasting. There seems to be less patience these days. The same traders who previously applauded 30% growth are now raising more pointed concerns about margins and free cash flow, two areas in which Shopify has historically been somewhat evasive.
Another level of uncertainty is introduced by the artificial intelligence aspect. Shopify has been heavily investing in what it refers to as “agentic commerce”—basically, automating customer interactions and merchant operations through artificial intelligence. It’s an ambitious but not wholly unpersuasive vision. However, AI infrastructure is not inexpensive, and the expenses are rising before the benefits become apparent. Shopify’s board has rejected a contentious proposal advocating for stricter responsible-AI standards, which will be put to a vote by shareholders on June 16. Investors are rarely reassured by such governance friction.

A helpful analogy can be found here. Before its economics truly clicked, Tesla burned money and absorbed skepticism for years. To be honest, Shopify’s free cash flow situation is better than most people realize. Over the past 12 months, it has made $2.1 billion, which is significantly more than its reported profit of $1.33 billion. In terms of finances, that is a negative accrual ratio, which indicates that the business is making more real cash than its accounting profits indicate. Even though the headline numbers don’t exactly shout stability right now, it’s a subtly positive indication.
However, the 52-week range has an unsettling tale of its own. It’s not a dip to go from $182 to $98.56 in less than seven months. A re-rating, that is. The stock made a brief attempt to recover the 200-day moving average, but it has since flipped into a ceiling instead of a floor. The chart appears bruised technically. Depending on their level of trust in the underlying business model, long-term holders may or may not care about that.
Whether Shopify is in the midst of a longer reckoning or at the start of a real recovery is still up for debate. The base of merchants is real. They have developed an e-commerce infrastructure that is truly difficult to imitate. However, the market constantly reminds us that growth is only half the picture. Shopify still has to answer for the other half, which is profitability, discipline, and the capacity to convert revenue into something that truly belongs to shareholders.
