Palo Alto's Rebound Leads to a Stock Split Announcement. Can the Stock Keep Its Momentum Going?

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Palo Alto Networks' (NASDAQ: PANW) troubles early in the year are beginning to seem like a distant memory after the company once again posted solid earnings results.

The stock plunged in February after the cybersecurity company said it was seeing "spending fatigue" among its customers and embarked on a new "platformization" strategy. This strategy was designed to switch customers from point solutions to using a suite of the company's products.

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However, this move came at a price, as in order to entice customers to move away from a bunch of single-problem solutions from various vendors with different contract lengths, it agreed to give some of its solutions away for free so customers would not have to pay for duplicate programs. At the time, the company said this would be the equivalent of giving customers about six months of free product capabilities.

While a bold move, it is not all that dissimilar from streaming services offering customers highly discounted trial rates, or cellphone providers buying out contracts to obtain customers.

Let's take a closer look at Palo Alto's fiscal first-quarter results, how its strategy to bundle services is working, and whether the stock's momentum can continue.

Platformization momentum continues

Palo Alto's platformization strategy continued to show strong momentum in its fiscal 2025 Q1 (ended Oct. 31, 2024), with it adding 70 new customers using its suite of security services in the quarter. About a third of those came from the company's September acquisition of security information and event management platform QRadar from IBM. It is looking for half of QRadar customers to transition to its extended security intelligence and automation management (XSIAM) platform by the end of its current fiscal year.

It ended the quarter with 1,100 platformized customers. It also said that the annual recurring revenue (ARR) from this group of customers increased by 6% in the quarter.

The company is looking to have between 2,500 and 3,500 service-bundling deals by fiscal year 2030 and said it is on track to accomplish this goal. Palo Alto management said it believes that in the coming years, the cybersecurity market will have fewer platforms and that point solutions will eventually get subsumed by these winning platforms.

Overall, Palo Alto's fiscal first-quarter revenue climbed 14% year over year to $2.14 billion, which was just ahead of the company's guidance for revenue of between $2.1 billion and $2.13 billion. Service revenue increased 16%, with subscription revenue jumping 21% and support revenue up 8%. Product revenue rose 4%. It forecast fiscal 2025 revenue to grow by about 14% to a range of $9.11 billion to $9.17 billion, up from prior guidance of $9.1 billion to $9.15 billion. It projected adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of between $6.26 and $6.39, up from a previous outlook of between $6.18 and $6.31, representing growth between 10% and 13%.