New York, Jan 21, 2026, 14:14 EST — Regular session
- CrowdStrike shares slipped roughly 0.2% in afternoon trading following a volatile session
- The company cites a commissioned Forrester study and is ramping up efforts with a new “data sovereignty” cloud initiative
- Cybersecurity names are split, as Palo Alto slips while Zscaler climbs
Shares of CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc. slipped roughly 0.2% to $441.73 in afternoon trading Wednesday, moving between $439.83 and $456.01 during the session.
Recent headlines highlight two key themes resonating with customers and regulators alike: demonstrating that security investments deliver returns, and pinpointing the location of sensitive data. For CrowdStrike, these issues directly impact how it markets the Falcon platform and its pace of expansion beyond the U.S.
The stock was already struggling before the recent reports. CrowdStrike dropped 2.46% on Tuesday, marking its fourth day of losses in a row, and it now trades roughly 22% below its 52-week peak, MarketWatch data show. (MarketWatch)
CrowdStrike revealed Wednesday that a Total Economic Impact study by Forrester Consulting showed a composite company switching from legacy endpoint security to CrowdStrike gained a 273% ROI over three years, recouping costs in less than six months. “Modern endpoint security isn’t just more effective, it’s more economically rational,” said Chief Technology Officer Elia Zaitsev. (CrowdStrike)
Just a day before, CrowdStrike revealed plans to launch new regional cloud deployments within Saudi Arabia, India, and the United Arab Emirates as part of its Global Data Sovereignty initiative. The goal: ensure customer data remains local while maintaining access to CrowdStrike’s global telemetry and threat intelligence. (CrowdStrike)
Chief Executive George Kurtz argued that data sovereignty mandates “cannot come at the cost of AI-powered security,” presenting the expansion as a means to maintain a unified defense framework amid increasingly strict local regulations. (Nasdaq)
Cybersecurity stocks showed a mixed picture. Palo Alto Networks dropped roughly 2.1%, Fortinet edged down about 0.6%, but Zscaler climbed near 1.4%. SentinelOne dipped just a bit. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF gained around 0.5%.
However, the cloud expansion remains in the planning stages, not yet complete. CrowdStrike highlighted risks and uncertainties tied to the upcoming deployments, warning that actual results might vary significantly. (Business Wire)
The upcoming earnings report is the next major milestone, where management will need to clarify timing and demand amid the new outlook. Nasdaq’s earnings calendar currently projects CrowdStrike’s report date to be around March 3. (Nasdaq)
Traders are watching to see if the stock holds steady after its recent drop — and whether “data sovereignty” shifts from buzzword to a tangible factor in the upcoming figures.