Q4, CrowdStrike
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CrowdStrike’s CEO cited ‘elevated demand’ for the company’s Falcon cybersecurity platform in the AI era.
CNBC's Jim Cramer talks with George Kurtz, founder and CEO of CrowdStrike, to discuss the company's outlook, stock performance, the role of artificial intelligence in the sector and more.
CrowdStrike is set to report earnings after the closing bell Tuesday, with traders anticipating a big move in the cybersecurity provider's stock following the results.
An analyst sees minimal risk to the company’s guidance and thinks shares have been overly punished by a broad selloff in the software sector.
CrowdStrike is still growing quickly, but the stock's valuation assumes that pace holds up with little noise.
CrowdStrike Holdings Inc CRWD reported upbeat financial results for the fourth quarter after the market close on Tuesday. CrowdStrike posted fourth-quarter revenue of $1.31 billion, beating analyst estimates of approximately $1.
Chief Executive George Kurtz said demand and revenue are climbing despite market fears that the rise of artificial intelligence could upend software makers.
CrowdStrike (CRWD) stock rallies after beating Q4 estimates with $1.31B revenue and $1.12 EPS. ARR reaches $5.25B with 23.8% YoY growth.
Two software names, both beaten down heading into earnings night. One delivered. One didn’t. That contrast is playing out in premarket trading this Wednesday morning, with CrowdStrike (Nasdaq: CRWD) holding steady while GitLab (Nasdaq: GTLB) is getting hit hard.
Founder and CEO George Kurtz made a compelling argument that we agree with, so why can't the rest of the market get behind him?
The first pure-play cybersecurity company to cross $5 billion in annual recurring revenue just did it during the biggest cyber warfare escalation in modern history. That’s not a coincidence. CrowdStrike (CRWD) delivered a blockbuster fourth quarter on Tuesday night,