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After Earnings, Is CrowdStrike Stock a Buy, a Sell, or Fairly Valued?

With strong execution but a stretched valuation, here’s Morningstar’s take on CrowdStrike stock.

In this photo illustration, the CrowdStrike Holdings logo is displayed on a smartphone screen.
Securities In This Article
CrowdStrike Holdings Inc Class A
(CRWD)

CrowdStrike Holdings CRWD released its fiscal first-quarter earnings report on June 4. Here’s Morningstar’s take on CrowdStrike’s earnings and stock.

Key Morningstar Metrics for CrowdStrike

What We Thought of CrowdStrike’s Q1 Earnings

  • CrowdStrike’s results were again incredible. The company continues to fire on all cylinders, and its execution remains incredibly strong.
  • CrowdStrike’s growth is driven by its success in its newer product categories, such as SIEM, identity, and cloud security.
  • Over the last year or so, the security space has bifurcated, with CrowdStrike and Palo Alto Networks PANW emerging as the clear favorites. If investors think CrowdStrike will be a massive security winner, they may want to own the stock even when it’s trading at 20x sales.
  • From our vantage point, CrowdStrike’s valuation is stretched. It’s the most expensive software business in the world, with a higher enterprise value over the next 12 months than any other company. It doesn’t have any room for error.
  • We think CrowdStrike is overvalued. At the same time, we’d recommend investors look at the stock if there’s a pullback. From a pure quality perspective, the company is incredible.

CrowdStrike Stock Price

Fair Value Estimate for CrowdStrike

With its 3-star rating, we believe CrowdStrike’s stock is fairly valued compared with our long-term fair value estimate of $300 per share. We forecast CrowdStrike’s revenue to see a 29% compound annual growth rate over the next five years. We expect the firm to continually expand its client base while maintaining strong upselling performance with existing clients.

In our view, endpoint security is a key area of enterprise security spend, and we expect it to remain important for clients in the coming years. CrowdStrike’s “land-and-expand” model has shown great success, with the firm consistently expanding sales from existing customers by selling them additional modules or protecting more endpoints per customer. We expect this upselling velocity to persist as the ever-changing threat landscape provides strong momentum.

Read more about CrowdStrike’s fair value estimate.

CrowdStrike Stock vs. Morningstar Fair Value Estimate

Economic Moat Rating

We believe CrowdStrike has a narrow moat owing to strong customer switching costs associated with Falcon, its endpoint security platform. We view endpoint security as vital to any modern enterprise’s IT security infrastructure; according to our estimates, it’s set to be around a fifth of the overall cybersecurity spending by 2025. CrowdStrike has emerged as a clear market leader here.

Additionally, we believe the value of CrowdStrike’s platform can be gleaned from the firm’s impressive net retention metrics and strong customer growth. With increased adoption of endpoint security platforms as enterprises switch away from legacy antiviruses, as well as a sticky platform ensuring the firm can land and expand its customers, we believe CrowdStrike is more than likely to generate excess returns over the next 10 years.

Read more about CrowdStrike’s economic moat.

Financial Strength

We view CrowdStrike’s financial position as healthy. The firm ended fiscal 2024 with around $3.5 billion in cash and liquid investments. While CrowdStrike carries around $740 million in debt on its balance sheet, we believe the firm’s cash reserves and ability to generate healthy cash flow from its business will be sufficient to cover its commitments over our explicit forecast. We do not expect to see a material change in CrowdStrike’s capital structure. In a tight macro environment, we expect the firm to raise capital by issuing more equity.

Read more about CrowdStrike’s financial strength.

Risk and Uncertainty

We assign CrowdStrike a High Uncertainty Rating. While the firm has positioned itself well to benefit from secular tailwinds, such as a shift to zero-trust security and digital transformations, the cybersecurity space is known for its rapid pace of development. Large incumbents that have performed well in particular verticals stand to be disrupted by upstarts that could offer better performance in key modules.

To stay ahead of the pack, CrowdStrike has invested a great deal of capital in building out its Falcon platform (which consists of more than 20 modules). However, risks come from a changing demand landscape and newer products that impact CrowdStrike’s competitive positioning.

Read more about CrowdStrike’s risk and uncertainty.

CRWD Bulls Say

  • CrowdStrike has strong secular tailwinds since the endpoint, cloud, identity, and security operations markets are projected to rapidly grow.
  • CrowdStrike has market leadership in endpoint security and has high enterprise penetration within the space.
  • The company stands to benefit as clients consolidate vendors and opt for a platform-based cybersecurity approach.

CRWD Bears Say

  • Large public cloud vendors often offer their own cybersecurity solutions, which could hamper CrowdStrike’s growth opportunities.
  • CrowdStrike faces competition from vendors like Palo Alto, which have increasingly invested in endpoint security.
  • There remains a risk that CrowdStrike may miss out on the next big technology, allowing its competitors to catch up.

This article was compiled by Leah Breakstone.

The author or authors do not own shares in any securities mentioned in this article. Find out about Morningstar’s editorial policies.

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