NEW YORK, May 29, 2026, 12:03 (EDT)
CrowdStrike shares rose about 6.5% near midday Friday, pushing higher with the rest of the cybersecurity sector. Investors are betting AI can drive demand for security platforms, not only threaten software names. The stock changed hands around $714.55 after moving as high as $718.96.
CrowdStrike reports fiscal first-quarter 2027 numbers after the market closes June 3, which has traders calling Friday’s rally more of a pre-earnings reset than a random bounce.
StockStory linked CrowdStrike’s gain to a broader software surge after Snowflake earnings, saying new numbers pushed back “SaaSpocalypse” worries—market talk for a selloff on fears that AI could hit cloud subscription models. The report noted CrowdStrike jumped 4.2% on May 28 and is up 47.6% for the year, trading at $669.67. StockStory
Snowflake raised its fiscal 2027 product revenue outlook to $5.84 billion, up from $5.66 billion, and inked a five-year, $6 billion deal with AWS. Reuters said shares jumped 36% in after-hours trading. D.A. Davidson’s Gil Luria said the Amazon agreement gives Snowflake “an even bigger role” as customers move to AI. Reuters
Snowflake said over 13,600 accounts now use its AI tools, according to its own statement. CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy called AI “a powerful tailwind.” CFO Brian Robins said full-year product revenue guidance is going up. The update pushed investors to look again at software, pulling in names from cybersecurity too. Investing News Network (INN)
CrowdStrike made company news on May 28, saying it was expanding Project QuiltWorks. Coalition, Liberty Mutual Insurance, Lockton, Resilience and Marsh joined the effort. CrowdStrike said this framework is aimed at helping businesses spot, patch and financially address cyber risk tied to frontier AI. The term refers to advanced AI that can speed up finding weaknesses and hitting the right attack windows. “Frontier AI risk doesn’t stop at technology, it lands on the balance sheet,” CrowdStrike chief business officer Daniel Bernard said. CrowdStrike
CrowdStrike’s last earnings gave longs a baseline. The company posted Q4 revenue at $1.31 billion, a 23% jump, with annual recurring revenue hitting $5.25 billion as of Jan. 31. For fiscal 2027, CrowdStrike guides to revenue between $5.87 billion and $5.93 billion.
Analysts are starting to get more positive. Benchmark and Wedbush bumped their price targets to $700 on May 27, and BTIG upped its target to $764 the day before, according to Barchart.
Seeking Alpha on Friday pointed to CrowdStrike’s AI products like Falcon OverWatch and Next-Gen SIEM as possible drivers for more cross-selling and keeping customers. But the analysis also mentioned valuation, noting CrowdStrike would have to deliver about 35% compound annual EPS growth for seven years, which is higher than what consensus is calling for.
Peers traded mixed. Palo Alto Networks added about 5.4% midday. SentinelOne dropped around 11% as its outlook missed and the company said it would cut 8% of jobs, despite a Bank of America upgrade.
CrowdStrike is trading near the top of its 52-week range, which Investing.com puts at $342.72 to $718.95. That leaves little cushion if the June 3 report misses on ARR or guidance. Any disappointment would test the strength of the AI trade.
Right now, investors seem to think AI adds work for security teams, not less. CrowdStrike has yet to show that in the numbers.