Palo Alto Networks posted better-than-expected fiscal first-quarter results on Wednesday. The company earned 93 cents per share on an adjusted basis, beating the 89-cent consensus estimate.
Revenue totaled $2.47 billion for the quarter. That edged past the $2.46 billion Wall Street projected and marked a 16% jump from last year’s $2.1 billion.
Palo Alto Networks, Inc., PANW
The earnings beat didn’t prevent shares from sliding about 3% in extended trading. Investors appeared focused on the company’s latest acquisition announcement instead of the positive quarterly performance.
Palo Alto Networks unveiled plans to buy Chronosphere, a cloud observability platform, for $3.35 billion. The deal will be funded through cash and new equity to replace existing awards.
The purchase price represents roughly 21 times Chronosphere’s annual recurring revenue. That figure exceeded $160 million as of September 2025.
CEO Nikesh Arora defended the acquisition on the earnings call. He cited the rapid expansion of AI infrastructure as the key driver behind the move.
The company intends to integrate Chronosphere with its Cortex AgentiX platform. This combination will enable AI agents to analyze Chronosphere data and automatically identify and investigate performance problems.
DA Davidson analyst Rudy Kessinger suggested the stock decline reflected two concerns. First, the high valuation paid for Chronosphere. Second, announcing another major deal before completing the CyberArk transaction.
Palo Alto Networks increased its full-year guidance following the strong quarterly showing. The company now projects fiscal 2026 revenue of $10.50 billion to $10.54 billion, up from the previous $10.48 billion to $10.53 billion range.
Adjusted earnings per share guidance rose to $3.80-$3.90 from the earlier $3.75-$3.85 forecast. Second-quarter revenue is expected to land between $2.57 billion and $2.59 billion, with the midpoint matching analyst estimates of $2.58 billion.
Net income for the first quarter came in at $334 million, or 47 cents per share. That compared to $351 million, or 49 cents per share, in the same period last year.
Capital expenditures reached $84 million during the quarter, well above the $58.1 million StreetAccount expected. Remaining purchase obligations climbed to $15.5 billion, topping the $15.43 billion estimate.
Palo Alto announced its $25 billion acquisition of Israeli identity security firm CyberArk Software in July. CyberArk shareholders approved the deal last week.
Both the Chronosphere and CyberArk transactions are scheduled to close in the second half of fiscal 2026. The dual acquisitions represent a continuation of Arora’s aggressive M&A strategy to expand the company’s cybersecurity portfolio.
Demand for cybersecurity solutions remains strong as organizations face increasingly complex threats from nation-state actors and sophisticated ransomware attacks.
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