NEW YORK, July 14, 2026, 14:10 EDT
- Okta shares gained 10.0% to $153.55 in late afternoon trading, after hitting $155.48 earlier.
- Based on the most recent basic share count, the stock surge tacked on roughly $2.44 billion in implied equity value. That’s 76% of Okta’s fiscal 2027 revenue guidance midpoint.
- Okta beat the First Trust Nasdaq Cybersecurity ETF, which climbed 3.0%, by around 7.1 percentage points.
Okta, Inc. NASDAQ:OKTA surged 10.0% to $153.55 in late Tuesday trading after International Business Machines Corp. NYSE:IBM said clients had slowed purchases because of broad cyber worries. Okta’s market cap jumped by about $2.44 billion. That’s about 76% of the midpoint in Okta’s fiscal 2027 revenue guidance. Investors are still spending on identity security, even as IBM flagged tighter software budgets.
IBM warned that customers are moving capital spending to servers, storage and memory. The company posted preliminary second-quarter revenue of $17.2 billion. Infrastructure revenue dropped 7%. A number of large deals slipped past their expected close dates. CEO Arvind Krishna said clients were “distracted with rapidly-evolving, industry-wide cybersecurity concerns.” One line shifted how the sector read the report. SEC
Moves were spread out but uneven. CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc. NASDAQ:CRWD jumped 10.6%, Palo Alto Networks, Inc. NASDAQ:PANW was up 6.7% and Fortinet, Inc. NASDAQ:FTNT climbed 3.4%. The First Trust Nasdaq Cybersecurity ETF (NASDAQ:CIBR) advanced 3.0%. Okta’s rally tied to the sector, though its premium widened much more than the group.
| Security exposure | Afternoon price | Day move | Outperformance vs CIBR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Okta | $153.55 | up 10.0% | beat by 7.1 points |
| CrowdStrike | $207.86 | up 10.6% | beat by 7.7 points |
| Palo Alto Networks | $352.27 | up 6.7% | added 3.7 points |
| Fortinet | $166.10 | rose 3.4% | added 0.4 points |
| First Trust Nasdaq Cybersecurity ETF | $94.56 | up 3.0% | — |
With 173.8 million Class A and Class B shares outstanding as of May 26, Okta’s $14.02 jump per share pushed its equity value from around $24.25 billion to $26.69 billion. At the midpoint of Okta’s annual sales forecast, $3.195 billion, its market value to revenue multiple went from 7.6x to 8.4x in just a few hours. That’s nearly a full turn added by one outside data point.
| Okta valuation measure | Previous close | Tuesday afternoon |
|---|---|---|
| Share price | $139.53 | $153.55 |
| Implied equity value | $24.25 billion | $26.69 billion |
| Equity value/FY27 revenue midpoint | 7.6 times | 8.4 times |
| One-day value increase | — | $2.44 billion, or 0.76 times annual sales |
Okta shares rallied a day after its product and AI strategy webinar. Investor relations head Dave Gennarelli told investors the session was “really about the technology” and said management wouldn’t take questions about finances. So Tuesday’s rally came without fresh company guidance. The market set its own expectations. Okta Investor Relations
Okta said first-quarter revenue rose 11% to $765 million, with current remaining performance obligations up 12% to $2.499 billion. Free cash flow came in at $271 million. cRPO, the contracted subscription sales due within a year, grew again. CEO Todd McKinnon talked up AI agents as “a new workforce inside every organization.” The company still sees full-year revenue growth of 9% to 10%. The market is waiting for a bigger jump. Okta Investor Relations
Okta didn’t break out revenue or bookings for its AI-agent products in company materials seen. At Tuesday’s share price, the market appears to be valuing those products as a way to boost near-term demand, not as a long-term bet. That makes a difference.
But there’s a weak spot in the trade. IBM’s cyber reference talked about clients getting distracted, not new purchase orders, and IBM itself said its teams “faltered” as deals slipped. Daniel O’Regan, managing director of equity trading at Mizuho Financial Group NYSE:MFG, said “the biggest issue appears to have been internal execution.” If that’s the case, Okta’s extra premium might fade before it even shows up in cRPO. The market wants to see real proof. SEC
Okta’s next key test is cRPO for the second quarter. The company guided to $2.505 billion to $2.515 billion, up 11%, and revenue between $790 million and $794 million. Beating those figures could help justify Tuesday’s move higher. Meeting the guidance might not. Okta will need signed deals to back up the numbers.
Okta was trading about 1.3% off its 52-week high as of 14:10 EDT, up around 78% for 2026. Now, investors want to see if the company can turn demand for cyber solutions into actual, near-term sales. That’s the question in focus.