in

Palo Alto forecasts annual results above estimates on cybersecurity demand

(Reuters) – Palo Alto Networks (NASDAQ:PANW) forecast fiscal 2025 revenue and profit above Wall Street estimates on Monday, a sign of growing demand for its cybersecurity products as the digital threat landscape evolves.

Its shares rose about 2% in extended trading, as the company announced an additional $500 million for share repurchases. They dipped briefly during the post-earnings call after CEO Nikesh Arora said the recent global IT outage has caused several customers to reevaluate their options.

A surge in online threats have triggered demand for companies such as Palo Alto offering cybersecurity products. However, analysts have said the July 19 outage, linked to CrowdStrike (NASDAQ:CRWD)’s software update, has exposed risks of dependence on a single vendor.

Beginning this quarter, the company will give next-generation security annual recurring revenue as the key financial metric for revenue projections both quarterly and annually, CFO Dipak Golechha said.

“It was a strong quarter and better-than-expected beat and raise as PANW continues to scale its Next-Gen Security business while balancing profitable growth,” said Shrenik Kothari, lead sector analyst at Baird.

The company, whose products include cloud security suite Prisma and the AI-powered Cortex portfolio, expects its annual revenue to be between $9.10 billion and $9.15 billion, compared with analysts’ average estimate of $9.11 billion, according to LSEG data.

Palo Alto expects its annual adjusted profit per share in the range of $6.18 to $6.31, compared with estimates of $6.19.

Its fourth-quarter revenue rose about 12% to $2.19 billion, beating expectations of $2.16 billion.

The company, which counts NetApp (NASDAQ:NTAP), Iron Mountain (NYSE:IRM) and a U.S. federal agency as customers, posted an adjusted profit per share of $1.51, exceeding estimate of $1.41.

Earlier this month, rival Fortinet (NASDAQ:FTNT) raised its annual revenue forecast.


Source: Economy - investing.com

Japan govt to raise long-term rate estimate to 2.1% in FY2025/2026, Nikkei reports

ECB may need to cut rates again in Sept, Rehn says