CrowdStrike shares tumble as fallout from global tech outage continues

CrowdStrike shares tumble as fallout from global tech outage continues


George Kurtz, president CEO and Co-Founder at CrowdStrike speaks at the WSJTECH live conference in Laguna Beach, California, U.S. October 21, 2019.

Mike Blake | Reuters

CrowdStrike shares slipped as much as 13% on Monday morning, as the cybersecurity software company continued to help clients across industries recover from an outage that took millions of Microsoft Windows devices offline last week.

Early on Friday, the company issued a defective update to its Falcon vulnerability-protection software that caused PCs, computer servers in data centers and display screens to crash, resulting in grounded flights and canceled medical appointments. The incident ensnared 8.5 million Windows devices, less than 1% of the global total, Microsoft said.

IT staffers quickly worked to fix computers. Meanwhile, hackers sought to take advantage of the confusion by setting up malicious websites that appeared to offer software updates. CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz addressed the situation on air with CNBC’s Jim Cramer.

CrowdStrike shares fell 11% on Friday, but the fallout was not over yet. Over the weekend, people shared photos on social media of Windows devices displaying the so-called “blue screen of death,” a sign of computers in need of attention from administrators. CrowdStrike said on Sunday that it was testing a method of more quickly fixing affected machines.

Guggenheim Securities downgraded its rating on CrowdStrike shares to neutral from buy on Sunday. Analysts led by John DiFucci said the stock was still trading at “the highest multiple of recurring revenue across our entire software coverage.”

It might take time for CrowdStrike to repair its image, and the fallout will probably hurt signings, the analysts wrote.

“We still have the utmost respect for the leadership team at CrowdStrike and believe that the company will eventually become even stronger as a result of this incident, and if investors have a multi-year horizon, they can ride it out,” they wrote. “However, we find it difficult to tell investors that they need to buy CRWD right now.”

Goldman Sachs maintained their buy rating on CrowdStrike shares in a note issued early Monday. But analysts at the investment bank said they expected CrowdStrike’s deals to take longer to close between the time of the outage and July 31, when the software company’s fiscal second quarter closes.

“Our recent conversations reaffirm our view that there will likely be minimal share shifts in endpoint post this event — although we recognize that additional details in the postmortem will further inform this view, analysts led by Gabriela Borges wrote.

They pointed to a 2010 McAfee outage that caused computer crashes to give a sense of what came before last week’s events. “The revenue impact due to deferrals was about $6 million of deferred revenue not recognized from the balance sheet, and revenue was also negatively impacted by another approximately $14 million,” CEO Dave DeWalt told analysts on a conference call. Intel bought the antivirus company in 2011.

WATCH: Cramer’s Stop Trading: CrowdStrike

Cramer’s Stop Trading: CrowdStrike



Source

Stocks end November with mixed results despite a strong Thanksgiving week rally
Technology

Stocks end November with mixed results despite a strong Thanksgiving week rally

A Thanksgiving week rally couldn’t put all three major indexes in the green for November. The S & P 500 gained nearly 4% for the week, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average added more than 3% — a strong enough showing for each to eke out gains for the month. It extends their streak of […]

Read More
Palantir has worst month in two years as AI stocks selloff
Technology

Palantir has worst month in two years as AI stocks selloff

CEO of Palantir Technologies Alex Karp attends the Pennsylvania Energy and Innovation Summit, at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S., July 15, 2025. Nathan Howard | Reuters It’s been a tough November for Palantir. Shares of the software analytics provider dropped 16% for their worst month since August 2023 as investors dumped AI stocks […]

Read More
CME disruption, Black Friday, the K-beauty boom and more in Morning Squawk
Technology

CME disruption, Black Friday, the K-beauty boom and more in Morning Squawk

CME Group sign at NYMEX in New York. Adam Jeffery | CNBC This is CNBC’s Morning Squawk newsletter. Subscribe here to receive future editions in your inbox. Here are five key things investors need to know to start the trading day: 1. Down and out Stock futures trading was halted this morning after a data center “cooling […]

Read More