CrowdStrike (CRWD) has been one of the stocks most watched by Zacks.com users lately. So, it is worth exploring what lies ahead for the stock.
Share prices of CrowdStrike (CRWD 1.20%) sank after the company reported further deceleration of its revenue growth and maintained its full-year revenue guidance. Despite the share-price decline and the cybersecurity company's forecast disappointing investors for the second time in 2025, the stock still trades up nearly 37% on the year, as of this writing.
I maintain a hold rating on CrowdStrike due to its ultra-high valuation, lackluster earnings, and just-okay forward guidance. CrowdStrike's current valuation—about 30x sales and a forward P/E near 100—is difficult to justify given recent revenue misses and modest guidance. While CrowdStrike remains the top cybersecurity stock, competition is intensifying and growth must accelerate to support its premium price.
'Mad Money' host Jim Cramer is joined by CrowdStrike co-founder and CEO George Kurtz to discuss the inquires from the Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission, company's latest financials and more.
Major U.S. equities indexes finished Wednesday mixed after a report showed job creation by private employers hitting a two-year low in April, prompting President Donald Trump to reiterate calls for interest-rate cuts by the Federal Reserve.
CrowdStrike Holdings Inc. NASDAQ: CRWD is down more than 6% after delivering its first quarter earnings report after the market closed on June 3. The company beat on the bottom line.
CrowdStrike has rebounded from last year's PR issues, showing strong free cash flows and expanding annual recurring revenue. The company beat earnings expectations in Q1 FY26, driven by robust demand for its cybersecurity products, but missed on the top line. CrowdStrike's Q2'26 revenue outlook disappointed, causing shares to slide 8% in the pre-market.
CrowdStrike's growth has sharply decelerated post-IT outage, with net new ARR and revenue growth rates falling below expectations. AI cybersecurity hype has fueled the stock price, but there's little evidence of AI-driven growth materializing in recent results or guidance. CrowdStrike announced a $1 billion share buyback amounting to less than 1% of the outstanding shares in an indication of the expensive valuation.
Yes, we think so. Trading at a whopping 122 times its adjusted trailing earnings, CrowdStrike (NASDAQ:CRWD), a security software company, looks expensive.
CrowdStrike (NASDAQ:CRWD) saw its stock fall about 7% in extended trading on Tuesday, June 3, despite reporting better-than-expected Q1 earnings. The company reported adjusted earnings per share of $0.73 on sales of $1.10 billion, surpassing consensus estimates of $0.65 earnings per share on the same sales figure.
The cybersecurity firm reported better-than-expected earnings but revenue was a slight miss.