New York, Feb 12, 2026, 07:47 EST — Premarket
- Palo Alto Networks ticked up roughly 0.6% before the bell.
- The company has wrapped up its purchase of identity security player CyberArk, it said.
- Feb. 17 results are on deck, with investors scanning for hints about integration costs and any signs of a guidance shift.
Palo Alto Networks jumped 0.6% to $166.34 ahead of the bell Thursday, following news it wrapped up its CyberArk acquisition. The cybersecurity stock closed Wednesday at $165.30, slipping 0.1%. 1
The deal’s timing isn’t great for investors. Palo Alto is just a few days from reporting quarterly numbers, and now it’s on the hook to clarify how “identity security” will fit into its broader growth narrative—and, critically, what the price tag looks like. Large integrations can eventually help sales, but the immediate focus tends to fall on costs, customer retention, and whether management can actually pull it all off.
Broader market sentiment hasn’t provided much support. On Wednesday, U.S. stocks barely budged—closing almost unchanged—as a robust jobs report stirred fresh concerns the Federal Reserve may hold off on rate cuts. That’s the kind of setting that tends to put pressure on richly valued software stocks. 2
Palo Alto has wrapped up its acquisition, saying CyberArk’s identity security line will stick around as a standalone platform for now, even as integration efforts get underway. CEO Nikesh Arora put the focus on the need to “secure every identity—human, machine, and agent.” CyberArk’s Matt Cohen, meanwhile, called the deal a “definitive cyber guardian for the modern enterprise.” Palo Alto is also eyeing a secondary listing on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange. CyberArk shareholders are set to get $45 in cash plus 2.2005 shares of Palo Alto for each CyberArk share they own. 3
Details from a Wednesday filing spelled out how the merger will work in practice. CyberArk’s 0.00% convertible senior notes due 2030 can’t be swapped for CyberArk stock anymore; holders now get a mix of Palo Alto shares and cash instead, according to the document. The filing also outlined changes to “capped call” transactions—derivatives that typically help blunt dilution from convertible bonds—linked to those notes. 4
Analyst forecasts have shifted in the run-up to next week’s report. DA Davidson lowered its price target to $210 from $240, holding on to its buy rating. Analyst Rudy Kessinger cited “strong upside on NGS ARR & RPOs”—that’s next-generation security annual recurring revenue and remaining performance obligations, which track contracted revenue in the pipeline. 5
Cybersecurity names split direction in the last session. Fortinet rose 2.7% Wednesday, notching a solid gain, while CrowdStrike edged up just a bit. The sector’s moves, once again, appear tied closely to the broader market rather than fresh company news. 6
CyberArk’s acquisition surfaced last July, pegged at roughly $25 billion in cash and stock—making it among the largest deals in a security industry that’s been steadily shrinking as buyers demand streamlined vendor lists and wider-reaching platforms. 7
Still, the risk in the short run is obvious. Should integration drag or costs outpace whatever cross-sell upside materializes, margins take the hit and guidance could tighten. Throw in any softness in enterprise budgets, and that’s extra weight, particularly with investors on edge over valuation.
Feb. 17 lands as the next big marker: Palo Alto is set to deliver fiscal Q2 results after the bell, then field analysts’ questions—finally putting hard numbers to the CyberArk tie-up instead of just slogans.