
What Happened?
Shares of cybersecurity platform provider CrowdStrike (NASDAQ: CRWD) fell 4.3% in the afternoon session after it reported Q1 FY2027 results that beat headline estimates on revenue, EPS, and net new ARR, however with the stock up 91% since its prior earnings release, the results did not scale to investor expectation.
The dynamic mirrored Broadcom's selloff on the same day: both companies had rallied so aggressively into earnings that an excellent print was not sufficient. The metric that tends to drive CrowdStrike's multiple is net new ARR, the quarterly addition to annual recurring revenue from new customers and expansions. It came in at $256 million, a Q1 record up 32% year-over-year. The beat versus consensus was $6 million. In each of the prior four quarters, that beat ranged from $15 million to $29 million. The shrinkage in beat quality, on the single most important metric, after a 91% rally since the prior earnings release, was what the market likely focused on.
Billings of $1.35 billion, up 18% year-over-year, also missed analyst expectations, adding another forward-looking concern. CEO George Kurtz attributed the narrower ARR upside to deals tied to April's "Mythos" platform launch taking longer to close than standard deal cycles, a timing issue rather than a demand signal.
The underlying results were strong. Revenue grew 26% to $1.39 billion, beating the $1.36 billion estimate. Non-GAAP EPS of $1.10 beat the $1.07 consensus. Free cash flow reached a record $468 million, representing 34% of revenue. The company raised full-year FY2027 net new ARR growth guidance by 520 basis points at the midpoint, and Q2 ARR guidance came in significantly above consensus. A four-for-one stock split was announced.
Analysts broadly held their constructive positions: TD Cowen raised its target to $700 and called the selloff "transitory"; Barclays raised to $675 maintaining Overweight; Jefferies trimmed slightly to $760 but kept Buy. Morgan Stanley framed it cleanly: "Near-term expectations may have been a bit elevated following the recent rally, but we continue to see room for further multiple expansion.".
After the initial drop, the shares shed some of the losses and rose to $719.41, down 4% from the previous close.
The stock market overreacts to news, and big price drops can present good opportunities to buy high-quality stocks. Is now the time to buy CrowdStrike? Access our full analysis report here, it’s free.
What Is The Market Telling Us
CrowdStrike’s shares are quite volatile and have had 16 moves greater than 5% over the last year. In that context, today’s move indicates the market considers this news meaningful but not something that would fundamentally change its perception of the business.
The previous big move we wrote about was 6 days ago when the stock gained 8.3% after a two-day wave of AI conviction, sparked by Snowflake's best single-session day on record and extended by Dell's blowout earnings continued to weaken the narrative that weighed on the software sector.
Snowflake's Q1 results sent the stock up 36% on May 28, its strongest single-day gain since its 2020 IPO, showing that AI is accelerating demand for enterprise data platforms rather than cannibalizing them. Then Dell's Q1 report, published after the bell on May 28, confirmed the physical infrastructure layer is expanding at a scale most analysts had not modelled: $43.8 billion in revenue, up 88% year-over-year, AI server revenue of $16.1 billion up 757%, and a record AI backlog of $51.3 billion.
The combined read-through was hard to ignore: enterprises are deploying AI at scale, and they need both the software layer and the hardware stack to do it. A supportive macro backdrop provided additional lift. The 10-year Treasury yield fell to 4.45% on reports of a US-Iran truce extension, reducing the discount rate on long-duration growth stocks.
CrowdStrike is up 58.6% since the beginning of the year, and at $719.41 per share, it is trading close to its 52-week high of $782.17 from May 2026. Investors who bought $1,000 worth of CrowdStrike’s shares 5 years ago would now be looking at an investment worth $3,476.
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