TLDR
- PANW reports Q3 earnings Tuesday, with Wall Street expecting $2.9B in revenue (up 29%) and adjusted EPS of 80 cents, flat year-over-year.
- Palo Alto acquired identity-security firm CyberArk for ~$25B, with the deal closing in February; integration is ongoing.
- AI agents are creating new attack surfaces, and identity governance is a key part of Palo Alto’s AI security push.
- PANW stock opened at $300.48 Tuesday, near its 52-week high of $302.95, with a market cap of $245B.
- Institutional ownership stands at 79.82%, with JPMorgan and Baird both raising price targets to $300.
Palo Alto Networks (PANW) stock opened at $300.48 on Tuesday, just shy of its 52-week high of $302.95, as the company prepares to report third-quarter earnings after the close.
Palo Alto Networks, Inc., PANW
Wall Street expects revenue of $2.9 billion, up 29% year-over-year. Adjusted earnings per share are forecast at 80 cents, flat with last year, as acquisition costs and dilution from the CyberArk deal weigh on profitability.
The company’s market cap sits at $245 billion. Its 50-day moving average is $195.20, and its 200-day is $184.31 — meaning the stock has run well ahead of both.
PANW has made five AI-related acquisitions in the past year. The biggest is CyberArk, an identity-security company acquired in a cash-and-stock deal that valued it at roughly $25 billion. That merger closed in February.
The CyberArk deal puts Palo Alto in a strong spot for what many see as the next security battle: protecting AI agents on enterprise networks.
AI agents need access to emails, files, browsers, and other tools to be useful. That access also makes them a target. Without proper identity management, they become a new way in for attackers — through techniques like prompt injection.
Why AI Agent Identity Is Suddenly a Hot Topic
Okta’s recent earnings gave the market a preview of what’s possible. Its stock jumped 30% the day after reporting, driven largely by excitement around its agent identity software.
CyberArk has similar tools, announced late last year. Palo Alto plans to fold them into its broader security platform — which could set up a similar reaction if results or guidance impress on Tuesday.
CrowdStrike (CRWD), Palo Alto’s closest rival, is also building out an AI security suite, so the competitive pressure isn’t easing up.
On the analyst side, the mood is broadly constructive. JPMorgan raised its price target to $300 from $200 and kept an overweight rating. Robert W. Baird lifted its target to $300 from $265, reiterating outperform. The consensus target across all analysts sits at $238.23, though that figure trails the current price.
Of 46 analysts covering the stock, 35 have a Buy rating, two have a Strong Buy, eight are at Hold, and one has a Sell.
Institutional Investors Keep Adding
Institutional ownership is at 79.82%. Norges Bank opened a new position in Q4 worth $1.4 billion. Vanguard grew its stake by 4.1%, bringing its total to over 67.9 million shares valued at $12.5 billion.
Cercano Management nearly doubled its position in Q4, buying an additional 94,740 shares to bring its total to 190,830, worth about $35.15 million.
Insider activity has leaned toward selling. Over the past 90 days, insiders have sold 93,660 shares for a combined $21.3 million. EVP Dipak Golechha sold 5,000 shares in April at $160.42 each. Director James Goetz sold 22,684 shares in March at $164.41.
Palo Alto also completed the acquisition of Portkey, an AI gateway provider, which bolsters its Prisma AIRS platform.
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