
Some ASX tech stocks have been hit hard over the past year.
In some cases, I think the sell-off has gone too far.
The two shares in this article are down almost 30% and almost 70% from their highs. Those are significant declines, and they show just how much sentiment has shifted.
But I do not think the long-term growth stories have disappeared.
For patient investors, this kind of share price weakness can create the chance to buy high-quality technology businesses at far more attractive prices than before.
Block Inc (ASX: XYZ)
Block is a much broader business than many investors may realise.
This ASX tech stock owns Cash App, Square, Afterpay, and a number of financial tools that connect consumers, sellers, payments, lending, and commerce.
I like Block because it sits on both sides of the transaction.
Cash App gives it a large consumer finance platform. Square gives it relationships with sellers. Afterpay gives it exposure to buy now, pay later and consumer lending. Put together, Block has the chance to build a more connected financial ecosystem than a traditional payments company.
The company is also leaning heavily into artificial intelligence (AI).
Block is using AI internally to improve engineering speed and product development, while also adding smarter tools into Cash App and Square. Its Moneybot and Managerbot products are designed to help customers and sellers identify useful actions, such as managing spending, spotting business cost changes, or improving financial habits.
That is where I think the long-term opportunity becomes interesting.
Block is not just trying to process payments. It is trying to make its platforms more useful, proactive, and embedded in daily financial decisions.
There are risks, of course. Lending growth needs to be managed carefully, competition is intense, and regulation is always worth watching in financial services.
But if Block keeps improving Cash App, Square, Afterpay, and its AI tools, I think the company could be far more valuable in the future.
The Block share price is down almost 30% from its high.
WiseTech Global Ltd (ASX: WTC)
WiseTech is another beaten-down ASX tech stock I would be happy to buy for the long term.
The company is building software for one of the most complicated parts of the global economy: trade and logistics.
That may not sound as exciting as consumer apps or artificial intelligence, but global trade is filled with complexity. Goods need to move across countries, ports, warehouses, customs systems, transport networks, and compliance regimes.
That complexity creates demand for specialist software.
WiseTech’s CargoWise platform already plays a key role for freight forwarders and logistics companies. The company serves more than 22,000 logistics companies and industry participants across 193 countries, including many of the world’s largest freight forwarders and third-party logistics providers.
I think that gives WiseTech a powerful starting point.
The company is also expanding beyond logistics through areas such as trade, supply chain, customs, trade finance, and verified identity and data. That could turn WiseTech into a much broader operating system for global trade.
AI could make that opportunity larger. Logistics involves a lot of manual data entry, document checking, compliance work, and exception management. If WiseTech can use AI to automate more of those tasks, its software could become even more valuable to customers.
The stock is not without risk. WiseTech has faced questions around valuation, acquisitions, leadership, and execution. But the market it serves is enormous, and its software is deeply tied to customer workflows.
The WiseTech share price is down almost 70% from its high.
Foolish Takeaway
Block and WiseTech face different questions, but both still have market positions that could become more valuable over time.
One is building deeper financial relationships with consumers and sellers. The other is becoming more embedded in the systems that keep global trade moving.
Share price weakness does not remove the risks. But when quality tech businesses fall this far, I think long-term investors should at least be asking whether the market has become too pessimistic.
The post Why these ASX tech stocks could be no-brainer buys appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
Should you invest $1,000 in WiseTech Global right now?
Before you buy WiseTech Global shares, consider this:
Motley Fool investing expert Scott Phillips just revealed what he believes are the 5 best stocks for investors to buy right now… and WiseTech Global wasn’t one of them.
The online investing service he’s run for over a decade, Motley Fool Share Advisor, has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*
And right now, Scott thinks there are 5 stocks that may be better buys…
* Returns as of 20 Feb 2026
.custom-cta-button p {
margin-bottom: 0 !important;
}
More reading
- 3 ASX stocks that could win big from the AI infrastructure boom
- Buy, hold, sell: James Hardie, NextDC, and WiseTech shares
- 3 excellent ASX ETFs to buy and hold for 10 years
- 3 ASX tech shares I’d buy with $20,000
- 4 ASX 200 shares tipped to climb 75% to 126% higher
Motley Fool contributor Grace Alvino has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Block and WiseTech Global. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended WiseTech Global. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.