Palo Alto Networks shares have surged 28% over the past month, pushing the stock to a record high and raising the question of whether investors should rotate into cheaper cybersecurity peers.
Palo Alto Networks Inc. shares climbed 5% to $337 in midday trading Thursday, extending a 28% monthly surge that has pushed the cybersecurity giant's trailing P/E ratio to 291 times earnings and its market value to $289 billion. The stock hit a record peak of $358.31 on July 6 and now sits 94% higher year to date.
"Palo Alto's a terrific company. I think it is a buy," CNBC's Jim Cramer said in January. BTIG raised its price target to $380 from $333 on July 1, maintaining a Buy rating and keeping the stock among its top picks. FBN Securities lifted its price objective to $330 with an Outperform rating, while Cantor Fitzgerald reaffirmed its Overweight rating and $340 target.
The rally follows a standout fiscal third quarter. Palo Alto reported revenue of $3 billion, up 31% year over year, and non-GAAP EPS of $0.85 that beat the $0.797 consensus. Next-Generation Security annual recurring revenue jumped 60% to $8.1 billion, aided by the CyberArk and Chronosphere acquisitions. "A standout quarter for Palo Alto Networks, with accelerating organic bookings growth as customers turn to us to secure their AI deployments at scale," Chief Executive Officer Nikesh Arora said.
The question for investors is whether the run has gone too far. CrowdStrike Holdings Inc. shares have added 22% over the same stretch, while Fortinet Inc. has climbed 18%. Yet rotating out of Palo Alto into either name offers little valuation relief. CrowdStrike trades at no trailing P/E — the company posted negative earnings per share of minus $0.04 over the trailing 12 months. Fortinet, at 63 times trailing earnings, is the cheapest of the three but still far from a bargain.
Palo Alto's premium multiple reflects a platform consolidation strategy that is gaining traction. Industry checks cited by BTIG suggest improving momentum, with stronger deal sizes and growing cross-sell benefits across network security, cloud, endpoint, SIEM, observability and identity. The company's portfolio breadth is a competitive moat that CrowdStrike and Fortinet have yet to match, and Palo Alto expects to sustain mid-teens growth driven by expansion into high-growth security markets. William Blair raised its fiscal 2026 free cash flow projection to $4.225 billion, modeling a 37% free cash flow margin that aligns with the company's own cash generation guidance.
The First Trust Nasdaq Cybersecurity ETF confirms how tightly these names trade together. Palo Alto, CrowdStrike and Fortinet combined account for 24% of the fund's net assets, with Zscaler Inc. and SentinelOne Inc. also among top holdings. That concentration means a single-name blowup in any of the top three could drag the entire fund down.
For fresh capital, Fortinet offers the most defensible profile on profitability — a trailing operating margin of 31% and net margin of 28%. CrowdStrike remains the purest growth play if trailing losses are acceptable. Palo Alto's category leadership and platformization momentum look durable, just fully priced. Brown Advisory's Large-Cap Growth Strategy, which holds Palo Alto, characterized recent AI disruption anxieties and acquisition integration concerns as exaggerated, emphasizing the company's robust free cash flow generation and dependable operational performance.
The next catalyst is Palo Alto's fiscal fourth-quarter report, where management guided to revenue of $3.345 billion to $3.355 billion and EPS of $0.96 to $0.98. That print, due in the coming weeks, will determine whether the stock can hold its gains or if the sector rotation trade finally materializes.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.