Palo Alto Networks has exceeded Wall Street's expectations for its fiscal third quarter, driven by a surge in demand for advanced cybersecurity solutions amidst the escalating threat landscape posed by artificial intelligence.
The cybersecurity giant reported adjusted earnings per share of 85 cents, surpassing the LSEG consensus estimate of 80 cents. Revenue for the quarter reached $3.00 billion, also beating the expected $2.94 billion. This represents a significant year-over-year revenue growth of 31%, boosted by $388 million from recent acquisitions of CyberArk and Chronosphere.
Despite a reported net loss of $177 million ($0.22 per share), a decrease from the previous year's net income of $262 million ($0.37 per share), the company's performance reflects a strong rebound after a period of lowered expectations following disappointing guidance in February.
Looking ahead, Palo Alto Networks has issued robust guidance for the fourth quarter, projecting revenue between $3.35 billion and $3.36 billion, exceeding the analyst estimate of $3.28 billion. The company also raised its full-year revenue guidance to between $11.42 billion and $11.43 billion.
CEO Nikesh Arora highlighted the growing urgency around cybersecurity, stating, "The latest advancements at the AI frontier have increased the level of urgency around cybersecurity, and redefined the shape of the industry for the coming years." He noted that over 1,200 customers have reached out to Palo Alto following the emergence of advanced AI models like Mythos, and the company has conducted 800 meetings in the past six weeks to address the evolving AI cyber threats.
Arora dismissed concerns about AI significantly disrupting the cybersecurity sector, declaring the "SaaSpocalpyse" for cyber as "dead." He anticipates that agentic AI will soon achieve unprecedented autonomous execution capabilities, enabling end-to-end cyber campaigns at machine speed without human intervention, thus reshaping the modern threat landscape.
Palo Alto Networks has been actively bolstering its suite of AI-driven security tools through strategic acquisitions. In the past year, the company acquired identity security platform CyberArk for $25 billion, rebranding it as Idira. Other notable acquisitions include KOI Security, AI observability platform Chronosphere, and Protect AI.
The company is also an early participant in Anthropic's Project Glasswing, which facilitated limited testing of its Mythos model to assess potential cybersecurity ramifications. The model, initially sparking concerns among hackers, has now been opened to an additional 150 partners for testing.
The company's stock has seen a significant rally, increasing by over 60% this year and more than 80% this quarter, as businesses invest more heavily in cyber defenses against sophisticated AI-powered threats.