Should Investors Buy This Hot Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Following Its Recent Surge?

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Palo Alto Networks (NASDAQ: PANW) stock has delivered respectable gains of 30% so far this year, which is commendable considering that it started the year on a negative note and crashed big time in February after releasing its quarterly results.

Investors were selling the stock in droves at that time as the cybersecurity specialist reduced its full-year guidance. However, the stock has been recovering in recent months, and the company's latest quarterly results indicate that it may be able to deliver more gains to investors.

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Palo Alto released its fiscal 2025 first-quarter results (for the three months ended Oct. 31) on Nov. 20. The company's numbers were ahead of consensus estimates, and it also raised its guidance for the full year. Additionally, management announced a 2-for-1 forward stock split, which will go into effect on Dec. 12.

Let's take a closer look at Palo Alto's latest quarterly performance and whether it makes sense for investors to buy the stock right now.

Key metrics suggest Palo Alto's moving in the right direction

Palo Alto's fiscal Q1 revenue improved 14% year over year to $2.14 billion, while non-GAAP net income jumped 13% to $1.56 per share. Analysts were looking for $1.48 per share in earnings on revenue of $2.12 billion.

Palo Alto rounded off its market-beating performance by raising its guidance. It now expects full-year earnings to land between $6.26 per share and $6.39 per share, compared to the earlier range of $6.18 per share to $6.31 per share. And it sees revenue increasing by 14% in fiscal 2025 at the midpoint, compared to the earlier expectation of 13.5%. The full-year revenue guidance of $9.12 billion to $9.17 billion is higher than analysts' expectations of $9.13 billion.

The company's stronger-than-expected earnings report and improved full-year guidance can be attributed to the healthy demand for its cybersecurity platform. Palo Alto management points out that customers are signing bigger deals with the company.

For instance, the number of customer accounts spending more than $1 million on Palo Alto's cybersecurity platform increased 13% year over year in the previous quarter to 305. The increase in customer accounts with transactions of more than $5 million increased at a greater pace of 30% to 60. Palo Alto attributes this increase in deal sizes to the growing adoption of cybersecurity platforms that integrate multiple tools into a single offering.