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saas selloff

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PANW: Cybersecurity Giant Down 33% on AI Fears

Palo Alto Networks (NASDAQ: PANW) has been caught in the crossfire of the enterprise software selloff, falling 33% from its 52-week high of $223.61 to $148.92. The cybersecurity leader, with a $103.8 billion market cap, is trading well below its 50-day moving average of $174.96 and 200-day average of $191.50 — a technical breakdown that has spooked momentum investors. Yet beneath the share price carnage lies a business that is accelerating. Q2 FY2026 revenue hit $2.594 billion with net income of $432 million, the company's best quarter in both absolute and margin terms. Free cash flow for FY2025 reached $3.47 billion, up 12% year-over-year, and the balance sheet holds $3.79 billion more cash than debt. The disconnect between Palo Alto's operational execution and its stock price reflects a broader market narrative: fear that AI will commoditise enterprise software. But in cybersecurity, AI is more likely to expand the addressable market than shrink it. The cybersecurity market is projected to double to $300 billion by 2030, and PANW is positioning its platform to be the AI-native security operating system for enterprises.

PANWPalo Alto Networkscybersecurity stocks

Sector Watch: CRM vs NOW vs WDAY

Enterprise software stocks are in the midst of their worst correction since the 2022 rate-shock rout, and the carnage is indiscriminate. Salesforce (CRM) is down 36% from its 52-week high. ServiceNow (NOW) has been cut nearly in half, falling 49% from its peak. And Workday (WDAY) — once a darling of the cloud HR revolution — has been slashed by a staggering 52%, trading at levels not seen in years. The collective damage across these three SaaS titans alone represents over $200 billion in destroyed market capitalization. The catalyst is familiar by now: fear that generative AI will upend the enterprise software business model. If AI agents can automate workflows, configure systems, and replace manual processes, do companies still need to pay premium SaaS subscriptions? The market is pricing in a world where AI disrupts the disruptors — where the very companies that built their empires on cloud transformation become victims of the next wave. It is a compelling narrative, but the financial data tells a more nuanced story. All three companies continue to grow revenue, generate substantial free cash flow, and are actively integrating AI into their platforms rather than being displaced by it. With [Salesforce](/article/crm-analysis-salesforce-hits-52-week-low-ahead-of-earnings-is-the-ai-disruption-sell-off-overdone) trading at a P/E of just 26, [ServiceNow](/article/now-analysis-servicenows-109-billion-saas-empire-is-down-51-from-its-high-why-the-ai-panic-selloff-ignores-46-billion-in-free-cash-flow) commanding a premium P/E of 65 but generating best-in-class operating cash flow, and Workday sitting at its most attractive valuation in years, this three-way comparison could reveal which battered SaaS stock is the smartest buy for different investor profiles. Let us dig into the numbers.

enterprise SaaSCRMServiceNow