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Today's Featured News Salesforce Just Triggered a Powerful Buy Signal for 2026Reported by Thomas Hughes. Posted: 12/23/2025. 
At a Glance - Salesforce’s chart is showing a bullish, multi-timeframe moving-average crossover that suggests improving demand across short-, intermediate-, and long-term timeframes.
- The same trend alignment indicates CRM may be positioned for a potential traditional Golden Cross if momentum holds into 2026.
- Price action has repeatedly defended the $225 support zone, reinforcing the view that a durable base formed before the latest rebound.
Salesforce's (NYSE: CRM) stock chart shows another clear indication that now may be a good time to buy it. The latest signal is a bullish, multi-timeframe moving-average crossover that may be considered more substantial because it involves three major moving averages instead of just two—and it also suggests the stock could form a traditional Golden Cross if current momentum persists. A bullish moving-average crossover occurs when a shorter-term moving average crosses above a longer-term moving average, signaling a potential shift in market dynamics from distribution to accumulation. In Salesforce's case the signal involves the 30-day EMA, the 150-day EMA and the 150-week EMA. The weekly series has flattened at times this year but remains tilted higher overall. New Hampshire just launched a Strategic Crypto Reserve — and James Altucher says it's the first sign that "Trump's Great Gain" has officially begun.
Altucher believes select cryptos could turn $900 into $108,000 over the next 12 months — and he's laying out the full gameplan in a new presentation. See Altucher's Trump crypto prediction here  The takeaway for investors is that CRM's market participants—speculators, traders and long-term holders—appear to be aligning, which underpins a constructive outlook for price advances. With these groups working in tandem, accumulation can overcome distribution, potentially pushing the stock higher as 2026 unfolds. Other technical signals on the CRM stock price chart point to firm support around the $225 level. Price hit that zone in late 2025, rebounded, then retested it in the following weeks. The late-year action included a quick test that could be read as the right shoulder of a potential Head & Shoulders reversal, followed by a stronger rebound in December that confirms a Double Bottom. Either way, support around $225 looks solid given recent results, guidance updates and the outlook for long-term financial health. Sentiment Trends Put Bottom in Salesforce Stock Price Action Sentiment trends among analysts and institutions have been central to CRM's price action. Analysts maintain an overall consensus rating of Moderate Buy, though early in the year several downgrades and target cuts weighed on the stock. The sell-off, however, appears to have been overly punitive relative to consensus, and institutions bought on the dip. Institutional buying has outpaced selling by a meaningful margin this year, helping to form the bottom shown on the chart. The data also indicate that, after the FY2026 Q3 release in December, analyst trends shifted back toward upgrades and higher price targets. That shift encouraged retail investors to return to the stock, driving it back above the critical moving averages. As of late December, the consensus implies roughly mid-20% upside at the midpoint of the target range, with substantially greater upside possible at the high end. Could Salesforce’s Next Rally Start With the New Year? The catalyst for CRM's next advance could simply be the turn of the calendar. After a year of selling the stock remains depressed and is likely to attract fresh positions in 2026. One incentive: forecasts for accelerating results in FY2026 — and the possibility that current expectations are conservatively low for cash flow and capital returns. Growth is being driven by rising global adoption of cloud technology and deeper penetration of services, specifically the Agentforce platform, which lets clients using Salesforce's customer-facing and data-mining tools apply insights via AI-powered agents. Salesforce is also adjusting its cash-return profile, positioning itself as a leader in agentic AI while increasingly returning capital to shareholders. The dividend remains small but symbolically important; buybacks have been more meaningful, reducing the share count by roughly 1% over the past year as of the end of Q3 FY2026. Both actions strengthen the investment case and add to the stock's appeal for investors.
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