CrowdStrike forecast second-quarter revenue below Wall Street estimates, signaling weaker government and enterprise spending on cybersecurity products, sending the company’s shares down 5.7 per cent after the bell on Tuesday.

Higher interest rates and sticky inflation have forced clients to rein in tech spending, weighing on demand for companies such as CrowdStrike, despite an increasing need for robust cybersecurity solutions due to rising threats and ransomware attacks.

The Department of Government Efficiency’s efforts to cut costs could negatively impact the cybersecurity forecast for 2025 as the U.S. federal, state and local government contract environment appears to be significantly more challenging, brokerage William Blair said in April.

Tariffs and macroeconomic uncertainty are likely to influence future client spending, the brokerage added.

CrowdStrike also faces stiff competition from other cybersecurity firms including Palo Alto Networks and Fortinet.

CrowdStrike said on a post-earnings call it expects second-quarter free cash flow to be impacted by about $29 million due to outage and related expenses.

The company reported total revenue of $1.10 billion in the first quarter, in line with analysts’ average estimate, according to data compiled by LSEG.

On an adjusted basis, it earned 73 cents per share, compared with 79 cents a year earlier.

CrowdStrike forecast second-quarter revenue to be between $1.14 billion and $1.15 billion, compared with estimates of $1.16 billion.

The company’s board also approved a share repurchase program of up to $1 billion on Tuesday.

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