NEW YORK, July 15, 2026, 07:07 EDT
CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc. NASDAQ:CRWD jumped by about $23.2 billion in market value Tuesday, after International Business Machines Corporation NYSE:IBM mentioned rising cybersecurity concerns from clients. That one-day gain equals 4.2 times CrowdStrike’s most recent annual recurring revenue. ARR measures the annualized subscription value that should repeat.
Shares finished up 12.14% at $210.73, leading the S&P 500 as the top gainer. The index itself added 0.38%. IBM’s warning mostly hit traditional software, with buyers moving to servers, storage and memory. Security names were bid up regardless.
Based on CrowdStrike’s April 30 share count and adjusting for the July 2 four-for-one split, shares ended Tuesday giving the company an equity value around $214.6 billion. That’s about 39 times current ARR and 36 times the midpoint of its fiscal 2027 revenue outlook. These are basic equity-value ratios showing how much expectation is already priced in.
| Item | Value | Relevant comparison |
|---|---|---|
| Estimated equity value after Tuesday’s close | $214.6 billion | 38.9x current ARR |
| FY27 revenue midpoint | $5.94 billion | Equity value at 36.1x |
| FY27 ARR, midpoint | $6.54 billion | Equity value at 32.8x |
| Estimated one-day value added | $23.2 billion | 4.2x current ARR |
IBM’s early Q2 update hit the stock after CEO Arvind Krishna said clients were “distracted with rapidly-evolving, industry-wide cybersecurity concerns.” He said several large deals didn’t close as expected. IBM now sees revenue at $17.2 billion, up 1%, and adjusted EPS at $2.93, both missing the analyst numbers Reuters cited. Results come out July 22. SEC
Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at IG Group, said “the big question will be how long the shift to infrastructure and cybersecurity lasts.” For CrowdStrike, what matters is how long that shift holds up—not just Tuesday’s main headline. A short dip in other software spending doesn’t mean as much as longer spending on security. Reuters
CrowdStrike shares posted a jump roughly 1.8x bigger than Palo Alto Networks, Inc. NASDAQ:PANW and about 1.6x SentinelOne, Inc. NYSE:S, using closing numbers Tuesday.
| Company | July 14 close | One-day move |
|---|---|---|
| CrowdStrike NASDAQ:CRWD | $210.73 | up 12.14% |
| Palo Alto Networks NASDAQ:PANW | $352.89 | up 6.84% |
| SentinelOne NYSE:S | $19.92 | up 7.39% |
CrowdStrike turnover almost doubled from Monday, hitting 12.14 million shares, but volume was still near its 65-day average. The stock price jumped harder than most, as traders seemed to see CrowdStrike as a top winner from IBM’s news, not just another sector play.
CrowdStrike is next up for a key test in the July quarter. The company’s guidance puts ending ARR at $5.7926 billion to $5.7946 billion, which means it is targeting an increase of $282.6 million to $284.6 million, ahead of the $255.8 million rise seen in the April quarter. That’s 10.5% to 11.3% growth. CFO Burt Podbere cited a “record Q2 pipeline” and “continued strong retention” when CrowdStrike raised its full-year outlook in June. CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc.
The read-through isn’t always clean. IBM said “we faltered,” so missed deals there could just be about execution, not a bigger cybersecurity budget shift to CrowdStrike. CrowdStrike shares closed roughly 12% above the $188.17 analyst average Barron’s noted, which raises stakes for any bookings setback or a one-off spending burst. SEC
U.S. core trading set to start at 9:30 a.m. EDT Wednesday. Next up are IBM’s July 22 report and the July 31 quarter end for CrowdStrike. Investors have already paid a premium for speed — now contracts have to deliver.