New York, Jan 21, 2026, 14:34 ET — Regular session
Palo Alto Networks shares dropped 2.4% to $179.59 in Wednesday afternoon trading, trailing behind a wider market rebound.
The retreat follows Wall Street’s sharpest one-day fall in nearly three months on Tuesday, triggered by new tariff warnings from U.S. President Donald Trump amid Greenland talks. (Reuters)
Stocks found their footing on Wednesday after Trump ruled out using force to acquire Greenland. “One of the reasons why the market is bouncing back is Trump stressed that he does not intend to use force,” said Damian McIntyre, head of multi-asset solutions at Federated Hermes. (Reuters)
The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust gained roughly 0.4%, with the Invesco QQQ Trust also climbing about 0.4%.
Among cybersecurity stocks, CrowdStrike dipped 0.6%, Fortinet dropped 0.7%, but Zscaler edged up roughly 1%.
On Tuesday, Citizens JMP analyst Trevor Walsh maintained his Market Outperform rating on Palo Alto Networks, holding firm on a $250 price target, according to Streetinsider.
The company’s Unit 42 research team dropped new cloud-security findings on Tuesday, zeroing in on Microsoft Azure. “We discovered an aspect of Azure’s Private Endpoint architecture that could expose Azure resources to denial of service (DoS) attacks,” wrote Unit 42 researcher Golan Myers. DoS attacks try to flood systems until services go offline. (Unit 42)
Palo Alto Networks offers security software and services spanning network security, cloud security, and security operations. It also operates Unit 42, which handles threat intelligence and incident response. (Reuters)
PANW ended Tuesday at $184.06, slipping 1.9%, and on Wednesday it hovered near the low end of its $178.78-$185.08 range. (StockAnalysis)
Next month’s results are expected to shed light on major deals. In November, Palo Alto Networks revealed plans to acquire cloud monitoring company Chronosphere for $3.35 billion, alongside its intended purchase of CyberArk. (Reuters)
That said, the stock is still exposed to abrupt policy updates and changing risk appetite. A delay in platform rollouts or postponed renewals from major clients could easily dent billings and weigh on the shares.
Investors will be eyeing the earnings report set for Feb. 12 after the close, StockAnalysis.com notes, focusing on updates to annual recurring revenue and margins. (StockAnalysis)