CrowdStrike shares slid 7% on Thursday as the cybersecurity giant’s latest quarterly forecasts failed to satisfy lofty investor expectations. The selloff shaved approximately $13 billion off the company’s near-$190 billion market valuation, despite a broader industry surge in demand driven by breakthrough advancements in artificial intelligence.
Market Reaction: A Steep Bar to Clear
The drop comes after an extraordinary run for the company. Analysts noted that the downward movement was largely driven by profit-taking. Prior to Thursday’s session, CrowdStrike’s stock had skyrocketed 90% since its March earnings report and was up nearly 60% for the year.
The high expectations are reflected in the company’s premium valuation relative to its closest peers:
| Company | Forward P/E Ratio (Next 12 Months) | Stock Performance (Thursday) |
| CrowdStrike | 137.74x | -7.0% |
| Palo Alto Networks | 68.91x | -3.3% |
| Netskope | N/A | -16.3% |
The ‘Mythos’ Catalyst and the AI Threat Landscape
Despite the stock dip, the underlying demand for AI-powered cybersecurity remains incredibly robust. The industry recently experienced a major catalyst with the April launch of Anthropic’s “Project Glasswing” and its advanced Mythos AI model, which forced enterprises to rapidly reassess their digital defenses.
On a post-earnings call with analysts, CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz emphasized that the frontier AI models are actually accelerating the need for modern security ecosystems:
“What the Mythos moment proved is that the world starting from the frontier AI labs themselves realized that AI needs a cybersecurity ecosystem… Post-Mythos threat landscape readiness reached a fever pitch with the primary question being: Is my organization protected?“
While Kurtz touted a “deluge” of new customer and partner inquiries looking to secure software against AI-driven threats, investors were ultimately looking for even stronger growth guidance to justify the stock’s premium multiple.
Wall Street Remains Bullish
Despite the short-term pullback, institutional sentiment regarding CrowdStrike’s long-term trajectory remains overwhelmingly positive. Following the earnings report, at least 22 brokerages raised their price targets on the stock, while only one issued a cut.
In a note to investors, Morgan Stanley analysts shrugged off the temporary dip, stating: “While near-term expectations may have been a bit elevated following the recent rally, we continue to see room for further multiple expansion.”
