CrowdStrike Draws Caution From Wall Street Over Growth Outlook, But Retail Goes Contrarian

Canaccord stated that while net-new annual recurring revenue (ARR) jumped to $221 million from $194 million in the previous quarter, overall ARR and subscription revenue growth continued to decelerate year-on-year.

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The CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc. logo appears on the screen of a smartphone in Reno, United States, on December 1, 2024. (Photo by Jaque Silva/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

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Shivani Kumaresan · Stocktwits

Published Aug 28, 2025, 11:23 AM

CRWD

CrowdStrike Holdings Inc. (CRWD) has garnered a cautious outlook from Wall Street analysts, despite stronger-than-expected second-quarter (Q2) earnings, due to tempered expectations for the back half of the year.

The cybersecurity provider reported Q2 revenue of $1.17 billion and an adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of $0.93, both of which exceeded the analysts' consensus estimates of $1.15 billion and $0.83, respectively, according to Fiscal AI data. For FY2026, the company expects revenue to be between $4.749 billion and $4.805 billion, compared to an estimated $4.77 billion.

CrowdStrike stock traded over 3% lower in Thursday’s premarket. On Stocktwits, retail sentiment toward the stock remained in ‘extremely bullish’ territory while message volume shifted to ‘extremely high’ from ‘normal’ levels in 24 hours.

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CRWD’s Sentiment Meter and Message Volume as of 06:50 a.m. ET on Aug.28, 2025 | Source: Stocktwits

The stock experienced a 1,717% increase in user message count over 24 hours. A bullish Stocktwits user expressed optimism about the earnings.

Canaccord dropped its price target to $430 from $475, stating that while net-new annual recurring revenue (ARR) jumped to $221 million from $194 million in the previous quarter, overall ARR and subscription revenue growth continued to decelerate year-on-year. Achieving further growth could be challenging, the firm said.

Bernstein trimmed its target to $343 from $371 and maintained a ‘Market Perform’ rating. The firm pointed to a dip in subscription revenue growth to 20.1% YoY, an impact it said is tied to a service outage last July. 

The firm noted that while CrowdStrike outperformed its revenue guide by $21 million, the company only nudged up its full-year forecast by $3 million, suggesting a softening in subscription growth expectations for the remainder of the year.

Jefferies analyst Joseph Gallo reduced his target to $500 from $530, maintaining a ‘Buy’ rating. CrowdStrike stock has gained over 23% in 2025 and over 59% in the last 12 months. 

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