Palo Alto Networks has had quite a run. The stock is up more than 44% over the past month, sitting at $260.58 — right near its 52-week high of $261. After a move like that, it’s fair to ask whether the rally has gotten ahead of the fundamentals.
Palo Alto Networks, Inc., PANW
The short answer: not entirely.
CEO Nikesh Arora put $10 million of his own money into PANW stock in late March 2026, buying in the open market near current levels. That’s not a small bet. It’s a signal that management believes the company’s trajectory justifies where the stock is trading.
Revenue over the last twelve months came in at $9.89 billion, with 15.4% growth and a gross margin of 73.5%. Free cash flow hit $3.57 billion. These are not soft numbers.
PANW’s platformization push is the core of the bull case. The company has built out a product suite covering network security, cloud security, SASE, XDR, XSIAM, and now identity security. Enterprises are moving away from managing dozens of point tools, and PANW is positioned to consolidate that spend.
Channel checks back this up. Partners were running 2% to 5% above plan, with solid pipeline activity across XSIAM, XDR, Prisma Cloud, and firewall renewals.
Next-Generation Security ARR is forecast at $5.83 billion, up 29% year-over-year. Remaining Performance Obligations are projected at $15.45 billion, growing 22.6% — that’s real visibility into future revenue.
The hardware side is also holding up. A price increase in April could support product revenue growth, with analysts projecting product revenue of roughly $424.6 million for Q1 fiscal 2026 — up around 20% year-over-year.
The CyberArk deal, expected to close in Q3 fiscal 2026, is being rebranded as Idira. The plan is to fold it into Strata, Cortex, and Prisma AIRS. Identity is increasingly the attack surface that matters most, and PANW didn’t have strong coverage there before.
At CyberArk’s Impact 2026 event, 77% of surveyed customers said they expected to increase spending by at least 5% over the next 12 months. None expected cuts.
The Chronosphere acquisition adds observability. Together, the two deals push PANW closer to a unified platform for securing AI-driven enterprise environments.
Valuation is the obvious pushback. PANW trades at a trailing P/E of roughly 135x to 144x, versus a sector median of around 25x. That’s expensive by any measure.
But 40 analysts have recently revised earnings estimates downward for the upcoming period, which is worth watching. International markets are also a soft spot — go-to-market changes in fiscal 2026 have caused some deal slippage and partner disruption outside the U.S.
Wall Street’s consensus is Strong Buy: 22 Buy ratings, zero Holds or Sells. The average 12-month price target is $246.20 — which, at current prices, actually implies about 5.5% downside.
The post Palo Alto Networks (PANW) Stock Is Up 44%. Here’s Why Wall Street Still Likes It appeared first on CoinCentral.

