Shares of CrowdStrike Holdings Inc. moved higher on Monday, supported by a fresh analyst upgrade and renewed optimism around cybersecurity spending as artificial intelligence threats intensify.

The stock rose 4.6% after Wolfe Research upgraded the company to “outperform” from “peer perform,” setting a $450 price target that implies about 21.8% upside from its last closing price of $369.58.

The move comes even as the stock has faced recent pressure, falling 10.6% over the past week and 4% over the past month.

Analyst upgrade drives sentiment shift

The upgrade reflects growing confidence that CrowdStrike can accelerate growth despite near-term volatility tied to developments in artificial intelligence.

Wolfe analysts pointed to the anticipated release of a new AI model by Anthropic as a potential catalyst for increased cybersecurity spending.

The model, reportedly named “Mythos,” is expected to introduce significantly stronger cybersecurity capabilities.

Addressing concerns that such advancements could disrupt existing vendors, analysts argued the opposite outcome is more likely.

The firm’s base case assumes minimal downside impact on security spending over the next 12 months, with potential upside if enterprises accelerate investments to counter evolving threats.

AI-driven cyber risks seen boosting demand

Further supporting the bullish case, Alex Zukin upgraded the stock to Buy with a $450 price target, citing expectations that AI-driven threats could reshape the cybersecurity landscape.

Zukin highlighted the potential for a “machine-speed” cyberwar, arguing that next-generation AI tools could outpace traditional, human-operated security systems.

“We don’t think anyone hears ’war is coming’ and chooses to spend less on guns and ammo,” he noted, reinforcing the view that companies will likely increase spending to defend against more sophisticated attacks.

He added that existing security tools are largely designed for slower, human-driven threats and may struggle to keep up as attackers adopt machine-speed capabilities.

This dynamic could drive vendor consolidation and benefit established platforms like CrowdStrike.

The company’s Falcon platform, flexible contracts, and product pipeline position it as a key player in what analysts describe as an emerging cyber arms race.

Growth outlook supports valuation case

Wolfe Research’s projections point to improving growth momentum over the coming years.

The brokerage expects annual recurring revenue (ARR) growth to accelerate to 25.5% in fiscal 2027, exceeding company guidance of 23.6%.

Net new ARR growth is forecast at 32% in FY27, well above guidance of 22.5%, before moderating in subsequent years.

Total revenue is projected to reach $5.99 billion in FY27, rising to $9.04 billion by FY29.

Despite these growth expectations, the stock is currently trading below its historical valuation averages, at around 13x EV/CY27E revenue and 40x free cash flow, compared with three-year averages of 15.5x and 50.5x, respectively.

Survey data also underscores strong demand trends.

In Wolfe’s 2026 CISO survey, CrowdStrike ranked first among vendors where respondents plan to allocate the most spending, while 82% of respondents in an RSA survey said they expect to increase investment in AI/ML security.

While the upcoming Anthropic model announcement could act as a short-term volatility trigger, analysts see the broader trend of rising cyber threats as a structural tailwind for CrowdStrike’s long-term growth.

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