CrowdStrike Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: CRWD) reported solid third-quarter earnings that were slightly above expectations on the top and bottom lines. The report also included a record level of annual recurring revenue (ARR).
But the report wasn’t enough to satisfy the high-speed traders who immediately sold CRWD stock after the report. That said, the stock is recovering the day after the report as investors have time to dig into the details.
Overall revenue of $1.23 billion beat expectations for $1.22 billion. On the bottom line, CrowdStrike posted adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of 96 cents, beating estimates for EPS of 94 cents. The company also raised its fourth-quarter revenue guidance to a range of $1.29 billion and $1.30 billion. That’s above the consensus forecast of $1.22 billion.
However, for Security-as-a-Service (SECaaS) companies like CrowdStrike, metrics like annual recurring revenue (ARR) are more important to investors. This number provides a line of sight into what future quarters will look like.
If that’s the case, they had to like what CrowdStrike had to say. The company posted records in new ARR of $275 million, a 73% year-over-year (YOY) increase, as well as in year-to-date ARR, which came in at $4.92 billion, a 23% YOY increase.
The Sell-Off Looks Like an Overreaction
Despite the report, CRWD stock was down about 2.5% in mid-day trading the day after the report. In a high-speed trading world, computers are programmed to look for specific numbers. If those numbers come in light, they sell first and analyze later.
That appears to be the case with CrowdStrike, which was carrying the burden of high expectations into the report. It’s important to note, however, that the stock was down by over 5.5% at the opening of trading. It would seem that more buyers are coming in after digesting the report.
The AI Threat Is Real and Growing
Many technology stocks have been under pressure over concerns about the actual opportunity being created by artificial intelligence (AI). It’s possible that some of those concerns may be showing up in the recent downturn in CRWD stock.
Such concerns would be misplaced. On the conference call after the company released its report, CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz reminded analysts on the call that the agentic workforce has added a new threat level that is expanding the attack surface for AI.
In a nutshell, enterprises must now account for the security of a physical and agentic workforce. CrowdStrike’s AI native Falcon platform is designed to be, as Kurtz said, “both the armor and intelligence layer that keep agentic identity secure.”
The report shows that many existing customers are adopting CrowdStrike’s new AI-driven features. This is part of CrowdStrike’s plan to appeal to enterprise customers looking to consolidate their security operations or seek integrated cybersecurity solutions.
Higher Price Targets Are Bullish for CRWD Stock
Analyst reaction to CrowdStrike’s report has been swift. The CrowdStrike analyst forecasts on MarketBeat show at least 10 analysts weighed in on CRWD stock the morning after the report. Seven of those analysts boosted their price target. Several of those targets were above the consensus price of $554.09.
This has been the case even as the stock has been under pressure, primarily due to valuation concerns. It’s too early to say whether CrowdStrike will grow into that valuation. For now, investors should follow the trend. CRWD stock is showing signs that the bearish momentum has stalled, reinforcing the belief that the recent sell-off was more due to profit-taking and not due to a repudiation of the company’s business case.
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The article "Wall Street Punished CrowdStrike for Beating Earnings? Seriously?" first appeared on MarketBeat.