Palo Alto Networks Inc. shares rallied Friday into rarified air for a tech company — and especially for an enterprise software company — in 2022, following another beat-and-raise quarter and praise from Wall Street.
With its shares rising as much as 8% Friday, the company’s stock finished the session being 9.8% down year to date. In comparison, the ETFMG Prime Cyber Security ETF
HACK,
+0.42%
is down 26.4% year to date, the First Trust Nasdaq Cybersecurity ETF
CIBR,
+1.13%
is off 23.5%, the S&P 500 index
SPX,
+0.48%
is down 16.8% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index
COMP,
-5.08%
is off 28.8%.
Citi Research analyst Fatima Boolani, who has a buy rating, said in a Friday note that Palo Alto Networks “handily cleared all key growth and profitability hurdles.”
While it was another beat-and-raise quarter, Boolani acknowledged the restraint in the “raise” part, which she said signaled “prudence against budget/large deal scrutiny” that the company “is seeing in pockets, and where Palo Alto Networks’ proactive deal rigor/pipeline coverage offer estimate risk backstop.”
Jefferies analyst Joseph Gallo, who has also has a buy rating, applauded the company’s annual recurring revenue, or ARR, growth of 67% and said that durable booking helped as deal cycles elongate. ARR is a metric often used by software-as-a-service, or SaaS, companies to show how much revenue the company can expect based on subscriptions.
Gallo, however, said he was keeping an eye on billings growth, which slowed with only a 27% year-over-year gain, and on a slowdown of large-deal growth, which was at its lowest since the middle of 2019.
Stifel analyst Adam Borg, who has a buy rating, said Palo Alto Networks’ report “checked all the boxes.”
“Net/net, we continue to believe Palo has a number of drivers to sustain at least 20%+ top-line growth and operating-margin/free cash flow expansion in coming years,” Borg said. “More broadly, we continue to believe that Palo is well positioned to be a natural consolidator of cybersecurity spend and that its growth/profitability characteristics provide a degree of defensibility in uncertain times.”
Of the 41 analysts surveyed by FactSet, 37 have buy-grade ratings and four have hold ratings. The stock hasn’t carried a sell rating from any analyst surveyed by FactSet since January 2022. Of the analysts covering the stock, 10 raised and six lowered their price targets, resulting in an average of $217.87, down from a previous $219.21, according to FactSet data.
While Palo Alto Networks isn’t on the S&P 500, it is on the Nasdaq 100
NDX,
+0.00%,
where it’s the 32nd-best performer in the year to date. But among tech companies, the only better performers are analog chip makers like Texas Instruments Inc.
TXN,
-0.10%
and Analog Devices Inc.
ADI,
+0.24%
and video-game publishers Activision Blizzard Inc.
ATVI,
+0.39%
— which is just waiting for the Microsoft Corp.
MSFT,
-0.19%
acquisition to close — and Electronic Arts Inc.
EA,
+1.11%.
Although it’s not on the Nasdaq 100, the only better-performing stocks in the field of enterprise software of much import are those of International Business Machines Corp.
IBM,
+1.06%,
which is up 10.5% year to date, and product management software company PTC Inc.
PTC,
-0.46%,
which is up 1.8% year to date.
Palo Alto Networks one of 2022’s best software stocks after another beat-and-raise quarter
Palo Alto Networks Inc. shares rallied Friday into rarified air for a tech company — and especially for an enterprise software company — in 2022, following another beat-and-raise quarter and praise from Wall Street.
Late Thursday, Palo Alto Networks
+6.97%
PANW,
kept up the momentum, reporting another Wall Street-pleasing quarter and saying that while macroeconomic factors weighed upon business spending, the company was not seeing lack of demand and that it could try to get customers to commit to deals earlier.
With its shares rising as much as 8% Friday, the company’s stock finished the session being 9.8% down year to date. In comparison, the ETFMG Prime Cyber Security ETF
+0.42%
+1.13%
+0.48%
-5.08%
HACK,
is down 26.4% year to date, the First Trust Nasdaq Cybersecurity ETF
CIBR,
is off 23.5%, the S&P 500 index
SPX,
is down 16.8% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index
COMP,
is off 28.8%.
Citi Research analyst Fatima Boolani, who has a buy rating, said in a Friday note that Palo Alto Networks “handily cleared all key growth and profitability hurdles.”
While it was another beat-and-raise quarter, Boolani acknowledged the restraint in the “raise” part, which she said signaled “prudence against budget/large deal scrutiny” that the company “is seeing in pockets, and where Palo Alto Networks’ proactive deal rigor/pipeline coverage offer estimate risk backstop.”
Jefferies analyst Joseph Gallo, who has also has a buy rating, applauded the company’s annual recurring revenue, or ARR, growth of 67% and said that durable booking helped as deal cycles elongate. ARR is a metric often used by software-as-a-service, or SaaS, companies to show how much revenue the company can expect based on subscriptions.
Gallo, however, said he was keeping an eye on billings growth, which slowed with only a 27% year-over-year gain, and on a slowdown of large-deal growth, which was at its lowest since the middle of 2019.
Stifel analyst Adam Borg, who has a buy rating, said Palo Alto Networks’ report “checked all the boxes.”
“Net/net, we continue to believe Palo has a number of drivers to sustain at least 20%+ top-line growth and operating-margin/free cash flow expansion in coming years,” Borg said. “More broadly, we continue to believe that Palo is well positioned to be a natural consolidator of cybersecurity spend and that its growth/profitability characteristics provide a degree of defensibility in uncertain times.”
Of the 41 analysts surveyed by FactSet, 37 have buy-grade ratings and four have hold ratings. The stock hasn’t carried a sell rating from any analyst surveyed by FactSet since January 2022. Of the analysts covering the stock, 10 raised and six lowered their price targets, resulting in an average of $217.87, down from a previous $219.21, according to FactSet data.
While Palo Alto Networks isn’t on the S&P 500, it is on the Nasdaq 100
+0.00% ,
-0.10%
+0.24%
+0.39%
-0.19%
+1.11% .
NDX,
where it’s the 32nd-best performer in the year to date. But among tech companies, the only better performers are analog chip makers like Texas Instruments Inc.
TXN,
and Analog Devices Inc.
ADI,
and video-game publishers Activision Blizzard Inc.
ATVI,
— which is just waiting for the Microsoft Corp.
MSFT,
acquisition to close — and Electronic Arts Inc.
EA,
Although it’s not on the Nasdaq 100, the only better-performing stocks in the field of enterprise software of much import are those of International Business Machines Corp.
+1.06% ,
-0.46% ,
IBM,
which is up 10.5% year to date, and product management software company PTC Inc.
PTC,
which is up 1.8% year to date.
Source: https://www.marketwatch.com/story/palo-alto-networks-one-of-2022s-best-software-stocks-after-another-beat-and-raise-quarter-11668800340?siteid=yhoof2&yptr=yahoo