Palo Alto Networks Inc. shares could be headed for their worst day on record as Wall Street frets about a strategic pivot thatâs expected to hit results in the near term.
The stock was off 24.7% in premarket trading Wednesday after the company missed expectations with its outlook in light of a change in strategy meant to get more customers to adopt a broader suite of its offerings â a move that prompted several analysts to abandon their bullish views on Palo Alto Networks shares
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If Wednesdayâs premarket action carried through to the close, it would mark the worst one-day percentage drop for Palo Alto Networks in its history. The current record is a 24.2% plunge, which took place on March 1, 2017.
âPalo Alto Networkâs shift towards platformization, consolidating point products onto one of their three platforms, raises concerns about the
potential for a slower path to achieving the companyâs goals,â wrote Rosenblatt Securities analyst Catharine Trebnick. âThis strategic move could have several near-term and mid-term impacts on stakeholders.â
Trebnick, who downgraded the stock to neutral from buy Wednesday, noted that the move could make channel partners frustrated âby having to sell more products within the same budget constraints.â Additionally, it could take time to train the sales teams on the new messaging.
Meanwhile, Palo Alto Networks is also trying to position itself more as an artificial-intelligence leader but the âplatformâs reliance on AI may necessitate higher investments, potentially impacting margins,â Trebnick continued, as she cut her price target to $265 from $290.
Piper Sandlerâs Rob Owens also downgraded the stock, writing that Palo Alto Networks was âcreating a large degree of investor consternationâ for the third consecutive quarter.
The company âis the largest platform player in the segment and, in hopes to accelerate that positioning, will take an aggressive approach in offering free product with the promise of longer-term, platform contracts,â Owens explained. âThis should negatively impact the business for 12-18 months â eliminating $600M from billings estimates in the back half of this year.â
While he continues to see long-term opportunity for the company, Owens said âthe steps taken this quarter undoubtedly raise uncertainty in the narrative as execution risk is elevated under current plans.â
He moved to a neutral rating on the stock from his prior overweight stance, while cutting his target price to $300 from $350.
Guggenheimâs John DiFucci said that 12 to 18 months is a long time for investors to wait, and he argued that the term âplatformization,â when described, âsounds like what theyâve been doing all along,â with the exception being that Palo Alto Networks will now offer customers a âbridgeâ as they add additional products and transition away from legacy ones.
âWe donât blame PANW for doing whatever they believe is the right thing for the company over the long term,â DiFucci wrote, but he has questions about why âother companies embark on similar paths of consolidation without having to give away product for a timeâ and why Palo Alto Networks delivered this âmajor change on a quarterly conference call when results are weak,â rather than six months back when the company hosted a Friday evening earnings call.
DiFucci rates the stock at neutral.
Raymond James analyst Adam Tindle said he will âneed evidence that this abrupt pivot is poised to yield acceleration,â in a note to clients titled: âYellow Flags Become Red.â
âWhile the stock is poised to be punished, and we are not dogmatic in our views, we struggle with the near/intermediate term investment case from here,â he wrote. âConsider, Palo is abruptly pushing a strategy whereby customers will receive free products for a commitment to consolidate on the platform, yet our downgrade cited general skepticism in the channel, and we doubt these partners will push a further consolidation with a vendor where they generally struggle with trust.â
At the same time, he acknowledged that âa commitment to hold/improve profitability over this time may provide some downside support to the stock,â though he stuck with his market-perform rating.
Evercore ISIâs Peter Levine, meanwhile, said the stockâs negative reaction was âunsurprising,â though he was staying bullish on the name.
Levineâs recent channel checks turned up âsufficient evidence to suggest that there is no demand problem, no underlying shift in the fundamentals, and no new emerging competitive concerns,â he wrote. âWith no apparent demand deficit, we believe [management] has enough credibility to instill some confidence in their choice to sacrifice short-term rev to pursue a strategic shift aimed at positioning the company for [long-term] growth.â
He has an outperform rating and a $405 target price on the shares.
Similarly, William Blairâs Jonathan Ho could see why investors would be worried but said the companyâs pivot could create a âtectonic shiftâ in the cybersecurity market down the road.
âAs Palo Alto gains scale, it will also have the ability to out-invest its competitors and have access to datasets across the security landscape that can serve as a sustainable competitive advantage,â he wrote.
Further, the move âcould drive a potential consolidation wave in the space and place point solution vendors in a more precarious situation,â said Ho, who rates the stock at outperform.