Data refreshed 10 July 2026 – IBM historical return
What If You Invested $1,000 in IBM on 1 June 2015?
IBM’s decade of reinvention shows that even world-class companies can struggle to deliver market-beating returns.
Invested on 2015-06-01.
Adjusted historical close.
Latest available adjusted close.
179% total return with distributions reflected.
Quick Answer
If you had invested $1,000 in IBM in 2015, your investment would now be worth approximately $2,786.56, an estimated gain of $1,786.56 and a total return of 179%.
Dividends played an important role, but IBM’s performance remained underwhelming compared with technology winners such as Microsoft and Nvidia.
The Investment Breakdown
| Measure | Result |
|---|---|
| Asset | IBM (IBM) |
| Start date used | 2015-06-01 |
| Amount invested | $1,000 |
| Entry price used | $103.20 |
| Shares bought | 9.6904 |
| Latest close used | $287.56 |
| Estimated value now | $2,786.56 |
| Estimated return | 179% |
Methodology: For consistency, WWIBWN standard 2015 scenarios use 1 June 2015 as the starting date unless otherwise stated. IPO and launch-based scenarios use the relevant IPO, direct listing, launch or earliest available trading date. Figures are updated weekly using the latest available market data. This standard scenario uses Yahoo Finance adjusted historical chart data, which reflects stock splits and distributions where applicable. It does not include tax, trading fees or slippage.
About the Asset
International Business Machines Corporation is one of the oldest and most recognisable technology companies in the world. Founded in 1911, IBM played a major role in modern computing and became synonymous with enterprise technology.
Its businesses have included mainframe computers, enterprise software, IT consulting, cloud services and artificial intelligence solutions.
Why This Starting Date Matters
By 2015, IBM was at a crossroads. Cloud computing was accelerating, mobile technology had transformed business operations, AI was gaining attention and new competitors were emerging. Many investors believed IBM would adapt and remain a technology leader.
The Investment Journey
2015-2018: Searching for Growth
IBM focused on cloud computing, analytics, AI and enterprise services while promoting Watson as a major growth opportunity. Revenue growth remained difficult.
2019: The Red Hat Acquisition
IBM completed one of technology’s largest software acquisitions, strengthening its hybrid cloud position and creating hopes of renewed growth.
2020-2022: Mixed Results
The pandemic accelerated digital transformation, but competitors often captured more investor enthusiasm and IBM’s performance remained subdued by comparison.
2023-2026: AI Renewed Interest
Enterprise AI renewed attention around IBM, although its gains remained more measured than those of high-growth AI infrastructure companies.
What Drove Returns?
Cloud Transformation
IBM spent much of the decade shifting towards cloud and software services.
Red Hat Acquisition
Red Hat significantly strengthened IBM’s hybrid cloud strategy.
Enterprise Relationships
Long-standing corporate customer relationships provided stability.
Dividend Income
A meaningful portion of total return came from dividends rather than rapid share-price appreciation.
Competitive Pressures
IBM faced intense cloud competition from Microsoft, Amazon and Google.
Could You Have Seen It Coming?
Partially. Investors knew IBM faced challenges, but many believed Watson would become a dominant AI platform, IBM would become a major cloud winner and the company’s size and reputation would provide an advantage.
Different Investment Amounts
| Initial Investment | Estimated Value Now |
|---|---|
| $100 | $278.66 |
| $1,000 | $2,786.56 |
| $5,000 | $13,932.80 |
| $10,000 | $27,865.59 |
Risks Along the Way
IBM investors faced slow revenue growth, competitive pressure, industry disruption, cloud computing challenges and shifting technology trends. The greatest risk was that its transformation would not generate sufficient growth.
Key Takeaways
IBM demonstrates that famous companies do not automatically become great investments. Business transformation can take longer than expected, dividend income can matter significantly and opportunity cost remains an important part of investing.
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FAQ
What does IBM do?
IBM provides enterprise technology solutions including software, cloud services, consulting and infrastructure products.
Why did IBM underperform many technology stocks?
IBM struggled to match the growth of faster-moving cloud and AI competitors.
Does IBM pay a dividend?
Yes. IBM has historically been known as a dividend-paying technology company.
What was the Red Hat acquisition?
IBM acquired Red Hat in 2019 to strengthen its hybrid cloud business.
What is the main investing lesson from IBM?
A strong brand and long history do not guarantee strong investment returns.
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Data and Editorial Information
This scenario is generated from market data and reviewed for calculation consistency before publication.
Historical entry and latest prices come from Yahoo Finance chart data. Adjusted close is used where available to reflect splits, distributions and other corporate actions.
The latest available adjusted market close is used for the calculation.
$1,000 divided by the entry price gives the units bought. Units bought multiplied by the latest price gives the estimated current value.
10 July 2026. Latest price used: $287.56 from 2026-07-10.
Prepared and reviewed by WWIBWN for educational and historical context. Calculations exclude tax, fees and personal circumstances.
Read more about WWIBWN or report a possible data issue.
Important: WWIBWN is for education and historical context only. This is not financial advice, and past performance does not predict future returns.