TLDR
- Dynatrace posted Q4 adjusted EPS of $0.41, beating estimates of $0.39, with revenue of $532 million topping the $521 million consensus.
- Revenue grew 19% year-over-year, and the company crossed $2 billion in annual recurring revenue for the first time.
- Despite the beat, DT stock dropped more than 10% in premarket trading on Wednesday.
- Full-year fiscal 2027 EPS guidance came in well above consensus ($1.94 midpoint vs. $1.68 estimate), though ARR growth is set to slow.
- Heading into earnings, the stock had already lost 9.5% year-to-date.
Dynatrace (DT) delivered a solid earnings beat on Wednesday, but the market wasn’t buying it. The cloud observability company saw its stock drop sharply in premarket trading despite topping both earnings and revenue estimates for the fiscal fourth quarter.
$DT | Dynatrace Inc., Q4-2026 Earning Report pic.twitter.com/88xpEV4NTm
— Hardik Shah (@AIStockSavvy) May 13, 2026
DT fell more than 10% in premarket, then pared some of those losses to trade around 2.5% lower by mid-session.
The quarter was, on paper, a strong one. Adjusted EPS came in at $0.41, ahead of the $0.39 Wall Street was expecting. Revenue hit $532 million, up 19% year-over-year, and cleared the consensus of $521 million.
One number that may have rattled investors: subscription annual recurring revenue (ARR) came in at $2.054 billion, just a hair below the $2.058 billion estimate. A miss is a miss, even a small one.
The milestone of crossing $2 billion in ARR was highlighted by CEO Rick McConnell. “Dynatrace delivered a strong finish to FY26, surpassing $2 billion in ARR and achieving our fourth consecutive quarter of 16% constant currency ARR growth,” he said.
ARR Growth Expected to Slow
That growth rate, though, is where things get complicated. For fiscal year 2027, the company is targeting ARR of $2.382 billion to $2.402 billion — representing 15.5% to 16.5% constant currency growth.
That’s a deceleration, however slight, from the 16% constant currency ARR growth the company posted in Q4 — a pace it held for four straight quarters.
For a software stock where ARR trajectory matters as much as the number itself, a guided slowdown can hit harder than the headlines suggest.
Guidance Tops Estimates — But Not Enough
On the revenue side, full-year fiscal 2027 guidance landed at $2.317 billion to $2.335 billion, with a midpoint of $2.325 billion. That sits just above analyst estimates of $2.305 billion.
The EPS outlook was the standout. Full-year adjusted EPS guidance of $1.93 to $1.95 put the midpoint at $1.94 — well above the FactSet consensus of $1.91, and notably above the $1.68 estimate referenced in some models.
For Q1 FY2027, the company guided adjusted EPS of $0.44 to $0.45, roughly in line with the $0.45 consensus. Revenue is expected to come in between $547 million and $551 million, with a midpoint of $549 million just above the $548.2 million estimate.
Heading into Wednesday’s session, DT had already lost 9.5% year-to-date, trailing the broader market amid a rough stretch for tech. The earnings-day drop adds to that pressure.
Futures tracking the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite were modestly higher at the time of the premarket move, meaning the selloff in DT wasn’t a broad market story — it was specific to the print.
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