CrowdStrike soars 12% on earnings beat and raised guidance as it benefits from surge in remote workers

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CrowdStrike soars 12% on earnings beat and raised guidance as it benefits from surge in remote workers
CrowdStrike Chief Executive George KurtzKatie Falkenberg/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
  • CrowdStrike soared as much as 12% on Wednesday after reporting strong fiscal first quarter earnings that beat analyst estimates.
  • The cybersecurity firm also raised its fiscal year 2021 guidance as it benefits from a surge in remote workers amid the coronavirus pandemic.
  • Following the results, several Wall Street firms raised their price targets, with potential upside of nearly 20% from current levels.
  • Shares of CrowdStrike are up 95% year-to-date.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
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CrowdStrike soared as much as 12% to $103.76 on Wednesday after reporting strong fiscal first quarter earnings that beat analyst estimates.

The cybersecurity firm crushed its own first quarter revenue guidance as it benefited from a surge in remote workers due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Here are the key numbers:

Revenue: $178.1 million, versus the $165.4 million estimate
Adjusted earnings per share:
2 cents, versus the -6 cents estimate
Fiscal year 2021 revenue guidance: $761.2 million to $772.6 million, versus previous guidance of $723.3 million to $733.5 million

Revenue growth of 85% for the quarter was higher than the company's guidance for revenue growth of 73%, and the company achieved non-GAAP operating profitability for the first time in its history.

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CrowdStrike added 830 new subscription customers in the first quarter, bringing its total subscription base to 6,261 customers, according to the company.

Read more: A $40 billion wealth-management firm says the US economy is only 19% recovered from the pandemic — and lays out a winning investing strategy in the wake of a massive stock-market rally.

Analysts at Stifel were impressed with CrowdStrike's earnings, and expect more gains to come.

The firm upgraded CrowdStrike to a buy rating and increased its price target to $108, representing 8% upside from Monday's opening price of $100.

"Looking at CrowdStrike's F1Q21 results, we would be hard-pressed to believe that the company was operating in the middle of a series of global crises," Stifel said in a note published Tuesday.

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Meanwhile, JPMorgan raised its price target to $120, representing 20% upside from Wednesday's opening price of $100.

The bank sees CrowdStrike benefiting from two trends: companies migrating to the cloud, which has accelerated as employees work remotely due to COVID-19, and market share taking from legacy cybersecurity technologies.

"We believe these factors are major reasons for the excellent growth dynamics [at CrowdStrike]," JPMorgan said in a note published on Wednesday.

CrowdStrike is up 95% year-to-date.

CrowdStrike soars 12% on earnings beat and raised guidance as it benefits from surge in remote workers
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