Next-Generation Technologies & Secure Development , Security Operations , Vendor Roundup

Stock Sell-Off: Cloudflare, Rapid7, SentinelOne Hardest-Hit

16 Security Stocks Fared Worse Than the Nasdaq Thursday, While Just 11 Did Better
Stock Sell-Off: Cloudflare, Rapid7, SentinelOne Hardest-Hit

Cybersecurity companies took Thursday's sell-off on the chin, with Rapid7, Cloudflare and SentinelOne experiencing double-digit stock price drops in Wall Street's worst day of 2022.

See Also: The Need for Cybersecurity Strategies to Evolve: A Zero Trust Guide for Federal Agencies

The Nasdaq Composite Index fell nearly 5% Thursday amid concerns around inflation and soft earnings from online retailers, with selling particularly concentrated in the technology sector. Sixteen publicly traded cybersecurity vendors fared worse than the Nasdaq Composite Index on Thursday while 11 fared better and just one - Mandiant, which is under agreement to be sold to Google - saw its stock price rise.

"The Fed is reducing liquidity in the markets and that's driving up volatility, and so this could be our new normal here for a bit until the Fed gets inflation under control and changes the policy," John Ingram, chief investment officer and partner at Crestwood Advisors, tells The Wall Street Journal.

Investors took comfort in Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell's comment that the Fed wasn't "actively considering" raising interest rates further following a 0.5% hike Wednesday, which was the biggest increase since 2000. But Wednesday's euphoria gave way to the cold, hard reality Thursday that firms still have to grapple with higher rates, difficult earnings comparisons and a stronger U.S. dollar.

Investors were also spooked by weak earnings reports from firms such as Etsy and eBay, which suggested that online shopping and consumer spending were waning in the face of high inflation and a murky economy. Also on Thursday, jobless claims rose more than expected to 200,000 while first-quarter productivity plummeted by 7.5%, which is the biggest decline since the third quarter of 1947 (see: Volatile Stock Market: Cybersecurity Fallout?).

"In all policy moves, however, there are negative consequences, which hopefully are muted and are less impactful than the issue that is being addressed," Rick Rieder, BlackRock's chief investment officer of global fixed income, writes in a note Wednesday. "The consequences we risk in policy tightening are potential recession, potential lost jobs and wages, and clearly tighter financial conditions."

Security Stocks Hit Hard in Sell-Off

No cybersecurity company fared worse than San Francisco-based Cloudflare, whose stock fell 13.93% during the day and another 16.48%, to $64.99 per share, in after-hours trading Thursday, which is the lowest the company's stock has traded since November 2020. The security and performance services vendor revealed a slightly worse-than-expected profitability outlook after the market closed Thursday.

The second-worst performance belonged to Boston-based Rapid7, whose stock fell 17.4% to $78.23 per share, which is the lowest the company's stock has traded since May 2021. The security analytics and automation vendor reported a weaker-than-expected outlook Wednesday, with Rapid7 projecting a non-GAAP net loss of $0.03 to $0.07 per share. Analysts had been expecting net income of $0.03 per share.

Taking the bronze for worst security stock performance Thursday was SentinelOne, whose stock fell 11.19% to $29.29 per share, which is the lowest the company's stock has ever traded since going public in June 2021. The Mountain View, California-based endpoint security vendor's stock price declined by 38.49% since the start of 2022 and now has a lower valuation than when the company went public.

Identity and access management vendor Ping Identity, endpoint security behemoth CrowdStrike, and vulnerability management vendor Tenable all saw their stock price drop by at least 9% Thursday. Web security giant Zscaler and privileged access management vendor CyberArk saw their stock fall by at least 8% Thursday.

Identity and access management vendors ForgeRock and Okta experienced stock price drops of more than 7%, while SaaS analytics provider Sumo Logic recorded a drop of more than 6%. And five security firms - app security vendor Synopsys, cloud security vendor Qualys, data security vendor Varonis, cyber services firm Secureworks and app delivery firm Radware - recorded stock price drops of at least 5%.

Just five cybersecurity vendors saw their stock price drop by less than 3% Thursday. Four of those companies - Mandiant, Mimecast, Tufin and SailPoint - are under agreement to be taken private, and the fifth - Fortinet - announced better-than-expected earnings and outlook late Wednesday. Aside from those five, the top performer was network security firm Check Point, whose stock fell 3.14% Thursday.

Speaking about the Fed, Jordan Kahn, chief investment officer at ACM Funds, tells The Wall Street Journal, "If they try to do too much and the market comes unglued, then they've kind of shot themselves in the foot because it will make it difficult to do future rate hikes." When it comes to rate increases, Khan says, "That's the fine line the Fed is trying to walk - to do as much as they think the market can digest without upsetting it too much."


About the Author

Michael Novinson

Michael Novinson

Managing Editor, Business, ISMG

Novinson is responsible for covering the vendor and technology landscape. Prior to joining ISMG, he spent four and a half years covering all the major cybersecurity vendors at CRN, with a focus on their programs and offerings for IT service providers. He was recognized for his breaking news coverage of the August 2019 coordinated ransomware attack against local governments in Texas as well as for his continued reporting around the SolarWinds hack in late 2020 and early 2021.




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