Today: 15 July 2026
Cloudflare’s AI Bet Just Got Bigger Before Earnings. Investors Have One Question

Cloudflare’s AI Bet Just Got Bigger Before Earnings. Investors Have One Question

SAN FRANCISCO, May 2, 2026, 10:06 PDT

  • Cloudflare climbed 6.1% Friday, bringing the stock back into the spotlight just ahead of its first-quarter earnings.
  • Dynamic Workflows, the company’s latest developer release, sharpens its appeal to builders working on AI agents and software platforms.
  • Valuation is the sticking point here. Cloudflare trades at a premium on those growth expectations, but there’s still competition in the mix, and GAAP losses haven’t gone away.

Cloudflare on Friday rolled out Dynamic Workflows, a developer tool aimed at making its Workers platform more attractive for AI agents and software that require persistent, automated code execution—handling tasks like pausing, retrying, and resuming operations without manual oversight. The timing comes just ahead of its first-quarter earnings report, offering investors a fresh signpost for Cloudflare’s AI ambitions and potential revenue impact.

Timing played a role here. Cloudflare jumped 6.1% to finish Friday at $217.50, hitting an intraday high of $218.28 as traders braced for its May 7 earnings. Fewer than 3 million shares changed hands.

Cloudflare has introduced Dynamic Workflows, a tool that allows a single application to send lengthy software tasks to various customers’ code as needed. To put it simply, the platform enables every customer, tenant, or AI agent to use their own workflow. Cloudflare’s system monitors each job—even if it fails, goes idle for hours, or stalls waiting on external go-ahead.

This sums up the current pitch to investors. Cloudflare isn’t just pushing web security, traffic routing, and content-delivery tools anymore. The company’s aiming for more: a deeper role in the software stack for developers, AI agents, and businesses looking to run apps nearer to their users.

On April 30, the company announced agents now have the ability to set up Cloudflare accounts, initiate paid plans, register domains, and get API tokens using a protocol developed with Stripe. Cloudflare’s terms still require human sign-off on permissions, but the intention is clear: shift setup tasks away from dashboard clicks and toward agent-led provisioning.

Cloudflare will deliver its first-quarter earnings once U.S. markets shut on Thursday, May 7. A conference call kicks off at 2 p.m. Pacific. Looking ahead, the company’s set to host Investor Day at the New York Stock Exchange on June 9.

MarketBeat figures show analysts are looking for adjusted earnings to come in at roughly 23 cents per share, with revenue around $621 million for the first quarter. Back in February, Cloudflare projected first-quarter revenue between $620 million and $621 million and set its 2026 full-year revenue range at $2.785 billion to $2.795 billion.

Back in February, Chief Executive Matthew Prince staked Cloudflare’s play on AI agents: “If agents are the new users of the web, Cloudflare is the platform they run on and the network they pass through.” The company posted fourth-quarter revenue of $614.5 million, a 33.6% jump from the year before, and recorded a GAAP net loss of $12.1 million—using standard U.S. accounting rules. Cloudflare

Cloudflare flagged plenty of competition in its annual report. The company listed rivals in security, content delivery, DNS, email security, cloud networking, and developer tools—and noted that big public-cloud providers might outpace it on speed or undercut on price. That leaves Cloudflare up against established edge competitors like Akamai and Fastly, plus the major cloud platforms.

This wasn’t a one-off. Fastly jumped 11.1%, and Akamai tacked on 0.8%. Following the surge, Cloudflare’s market cap hit roughly $76 billion—a lofty number, considering the company has yet to nail down steady GAAP profits.

The bear scenario isn’t complicated. Should next week’s numbers show sluggish growth among big clients, softer AI demand, or spending that outpaces expectations, there’s not much cushion for the shares. Cloudflare’s 10-K lays it out: if they can’t win, keep, and grow their paying customer base, results will take a hit. Heightened competition could also squeeze their standing or slow revenue gains.

Cloudflare stands out for investors chasing exposure to AI traffic, developer tools, and internet security—all under one roof. The question is whether the company’s May 7 report will show that this mix is actually driving revenue, or just headlines.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors. Follow Khadija Saeed on Google News.

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