How SoundHound AI Stock Lost 20% Last Month

Shares of SoundHound AI (SOUN 2.55%) fell 20.1% in March 2026, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. The maker of artificial intelligence (AI) tools for giving voice commands to computer systems had a pretty weird month, honestly.

Macroeconomic turbulence has been weighing on this stock for a while, and there was plenty of it last month. The company also saw some turnover in the executive office, which made many investors nervous. Overall, the stock continued a bearish trend that started in the fall of 2025.

It was a fairly slow slide, too. In fact, SoundHound AI’s largest single-day move in March was a 13.9% jump at the very end.

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NASDAQ: SOUN

SoundHound AI

Today’s Change

(-2.55%) $-0.17

Current Price

$6.70

Key Data Points

Market Cap

$2.9B

Day’s Range

$6.64 - $7.17

52wk Range

$5.83 - $22.17

Volume

537K

Avg Vol

27M

Gross Margin

32.96%

Another month, another price drop

SoundHound AI reported Q4 2025 results on Feb. 26, with just two trading days left in that month. The company crushed analyst estimates across the board and issued bullish guidance for the next fiscal year. It was good news, but not great enough to stop a relentless slide. Share prices rose 5.4% the next day, but gave back most of that gain with a 4.2% drop to close out the month.

Economic news set the tone from that point, though trading volumes fell sharply. Growth stock investors seemed unwilling to commit to positive signals, and the Iranian conflict raised many question marks along the way. The S&P 500 (^GSPC +0.72%) market index fell 5.1%, hamstrung by soaring oil prices, rising inflation, and a gnawing fear that the AI rally might have gone too far, too fast.

Being an unprofitable AI specialist, SoundHound AI saw direct exposure to that last pressure point. The other bits only affected high-risk investors’ access to extra capital at reasonable interest rates. Wall Street largely shrugged at a steady stream of technology partnerships and deal announcements, and none of them sparked a significant SoundHound AI rally.

But the Street wasn’t asleep. The stock posted three days in a row of roughly 5% single-day drops when CFO Nitesh Sharan bid farewell on March 18. After more than four years at SoundHound AI, starting just months before the company’s IPO in April 2022, Sharan is moving on to the same role at privately held quantum computing company Quantinuum. The move will take effect this Friday, April 3.

What about the sharp recovery at the end of March? Well, SoundHound AI didn’t have much news to share on that occasion. The stock followed the overall market on a relief rally, inspired by potential peace in the Middle East. That’s enough for a double-digit spike after a month full of economic pressure.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Why the CFO change wasn’t a disaster

While searching for a permanent CFO, co-founder James Horn is returning to a role he held for 15 years. And Sharan is leaving to pursue another career opportunity, given a few weeks to prepare the handover and friendly compliments from CEO Keyvan Mohajer.

I don’t see this CFO change as a bearish sign; it may even be an opportunity to recruit a name with experience in the next phase of SoundHound AI’s growth story. The company has shifted its focus from fundraising to deal-making, and it’s time to monetize the plethora of long-term contracts that were signed in recent years.

Yet, SoundHound AI’s stock is down 58% in six months. That’s a buying window in my eyes, not a falling knife.

SPX-4.71%
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