‘Long-term investors will be rewarded’: Goldman Sachs explains why you should ‘buy’ these 2 cybersecurity stocks

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Our digital world runs on computer tech, and that tech is only going to become more autonomous and more ubiquitous. And that, in turn, only underscores the ongoing importance of online security. With digital automation growing, it’s more important than ever, right now, to start firming up the digital protections.

Against this backdrop, Goldman Sachs' Gabriela Borges has turned her eye on the cybersecurity sector. The analyst sees several industry dynamics that are favorable for long-term investors, including: “(1) Multi-product platforms have gained momentum and are closer to solving the challenge of staying innovative in subsegments historically defined by boom and bust product cycles. (2) The industry is less cyclical as mix shifts away from hardware and toward SaaS, and given consistent prioritization of security spend in enterprise budgets."

Borges doesn’t leave us with a macro view of the industry. The analyst goes on to give a drill-down to the micro level, and picks out two cybersecurity stocks that she sees as potential winners for the long haul.

In fact, Borges is not the only one singing these stocks’ praises. According to the TipRanks platform, each boasts a “Strong Buy” consensus rating from the broader analyst community, and offers double-digit upside potential for the year ahead. Let’s take a closer look.

CrowdStrike Holdings (CRWD)

The first Goldman-pick we’ll look at is CrowdStrike, the producer of the high-end Falcon Endpoint Protection line, and a leader in the cybersecurity ecosystem. CrowdStrike’s products have set an industry standard for online network protection and for digital security, and include a range of cloud-based modules for a wide variety of applications. The company makes the products available by subscription through the Software-as-a-Service model.

The company reported some sound metrics in its last quarterly report, for Q3 of fiscal 2023. Revenue was up 53% year-over-year, at $581 million, and annual recurring revenue, at $2.34 billion, was up 54%. On the bottom line, CrowdStrike reported a fiscal Q3 earnings of 40 cents per share, by non-GAAP measures, beating consensus estimate of 32 cents per share.

However, the company provided revenue guidance that fell short of estimates. Specifically, Q4 revenue is expected to be in a range of $619.1 million to $628.2 million, below Street estimates of $634.2 million.

While acknowledging that current market conditions act as a headwind on the stock, Goldman Sachs' Gabriela Borges believes it is well-placed for strong growth.

“We expect to see a moderation in growth rate… driven primarily by slower growth in the endpoint TAM and a slower pace of market share gain – and we believe this is well understood by the market. Over the medium term, 1) we expect to see steady growth in endpoint (80%+ of ARR), based on our bottom-up market share model suggesting next-gen endpoint technologies hold close to 50% share today; 2) we expect to see outsized growth in cloud, where our industry conversations suggest CrowdStrike is competitive given its core competencies in data collection and monitoring," Borges opined.