<p>Justin Sullivan / Getty Images</p>

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

  • CrowdStrike reports fiscal second-quarter earnings next Wednesday, Aug. 28.
  • Analysts expect the cybersecurity company to report revenue and profit growth from the year-ago period.
  • CrowdStrike will also likely provide updates about the impact of last month’s global outage spurred by the company’s faulty software update.

CrowdStrike (CRWD) will release its second-quarter results for fiscal 2025 after the bell next Wednesday, Aug. 28, its first earnings report since a faulty software update it launched caused a global outage, with investors looking to gauge the impact of the incident.

Analysts expect revenue to grow to $957.6 million from $731.63 million a year ago, according to estimates compiled by Visible Alpha. Net income is projected to be $49.42 million, or 20 cents per share, a jump from the year-ago period.

   Analyst Estimates for Q2 2025  Q1 2025 Q2 2024 
 Revenue $957.6 million  $921.04 million $731.63 million 
 Diluted Earnings Per Share  20 cents  17 cents  3 cents
 Net Income  $49.42 million  $46.26 million  $8.48 million

Key Metrics: Outage Impact on Full-Year Outlook

CrowdStrike could update its fiscal 2025 revenue guidance, giving investors greater insight into the near-term impact of the July global outage on sales.

Citi analysts said that CrowdStrike won’t come out of the incident “unscathed” given higher discounts, lower negotiating leverage, and litigation costs it now faces. However, the analysts did say that they believe the company “can gradually overcome unavoidable headwinds” in the long term.

Analysts expect the full-year fiscal 2025 revenue outlook to be about $3.96 billion, according to consensus estimates compiled by Visible Alpha, which would be slightly below the low end of the company’s previously provided guidance of between $3.98 billion and $4.01 billion, issued in early June before the global outage.

Business Spotlight: Post-Outage Litigation Efforts

CrowdStrike could face legal action from customers affected by the outage, with some estimates indicating it could cost the affected companies several billion dollars in losses.

Delta Air Lines (DAL), which said the incident cost the airline at least $500 million, has threatened legal action against CrowdStrike. However, the cybersecurity company and Microsoft (MSFT) have disputed Delta’s claims on how the events unfolded.

CrowdStrike may provide updates about the potential litigation and its expectations for legal costs when it reports earnings Aug. 28.

CrowdStrike shares have gained about 7% since the start of the year, at $273.21 as of Wednesday’s close.

Read the original article on Investopedia.