George Kurtz
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CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz said concerns surrounding AI-powered cyber threats are becoming a growing tailwind for the company, but investors expecting to see that impact in the first quarter were looking too soon. "You're talking about Mythos breaking in the middle of April. Our quarter ends at the end of April," Kurtz said on CNBC's "Mad Money" on Thursday.
CrowdStrike is a buy, just not yet. Here's why
CrowdStrike on Wednesday evening reported better-than-expected quarterly results and better-than-expected forward guidance, only to see its near-record-high stock sell off. The hot money that got in, looking for a Hewlett Packard Enterprise or Dell type post-earnings surge , no doubt booked profits, sending shares down more than 11% to around $664 each. We're not short-term thinkers.
Mythos rejuvenated the cybersecurity sector. Earnings put the recent rally to the test
Anthropic's Mythos model offered a much-needed lifeline to cybersecurity firms in the age of artificial intelligence. Yet, this week's cybersecurity earnings offered a brutal reminder that even with tailwinds, sometimes good just isn't good enough as shares of CrowdStrike and Palo Alto Networks lost 8% and 3%, respectively. "People probably got a little over their skis," said Joseph Gallo, a software analyst at Jefferies.
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CrowdStrike narrowly beats estimates on AI tailwinds, but stock falls 10%
CrowdStrike narrowly beat Wall Street's fiscal first-quarter estimates after the bell on Wednesday, but shares slid 10% following the report. Here's how the company did versus LSEG estimates: - Earnings per share: $1.10 adjusted vs. $1.07 expected - Revenue: $1.39 billion vs. $1.36 billion estimate The cybersecurity company said revenue grew 26% from a year ago. Net income totaled about $27.8 million, or 11 cents per share.
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