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Zscaler (ZS) was downgraded by BTIG from Buy to Neutral with its price target removed entirely, reflecting a valuation reset rather than fundamental weakness as the stock has fallen sharply despite strong earnings and raised guidance.
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The downgrade signals that investors should be cautious about adding to a Zscaler stock position at current levels despite the broader analyst community remaining constructive.
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Zscaler (NASDAQ:ZS) stock just got downgraded by BTIG from Buy to Neutral, with the firm removing its price target entirely. The downgrade arrives as Zscaler stock has declined 44% year-to-date. The move raises a critical question: has the cybersecurity boom already been priced into this stock, or is something more structural at play?
The call stands out because it comes despite strong earnings reports and raised guidance. That tension between Zscaler’s solid fundamentals and a collapsing stock price is exactly what BTIG appears to be wrestling with.
|
Ticker |
Company |
Firm |
Action |
Old Rating |
New Rating |
Old Target |
New Target |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
ZS |
Zscaler |
BTIG |
Downgrade |
Buy |
Neutral |
$209.00 |
N/A |
BTIG’s move reflects a valuation reset rather than a fundamental collapse. The firm’s prior Buy rating carried a $209 price target, and with the stock trading near $126.64, the absence of a new target signals BTIG sees limited near-term catalyst for a bullish stance. The path to a meaningful re-rating is murky given ongoing GAAP losses, acquisition integration risks, and a market increasingly demanding cleaner profitability over raw growth.
READ: The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks
Zscaler operates the Zero Trust Exchange platform, distributed across more than 160 data centers globally. The platform uses AI to combat billions of cyber threats daily, with three core growth pillars: AI Security, Zero Trust Everywhere, and Data Security.
In its most recent quarter, Zscaler’s revenue rose 25.9% year-over-year to $815.75 million, beating estimates, while annual recurring revenue reached $3.36 billion, up 25% year-over-year. The company raised its full-year revenue guidance to $3.309 billion to $3.322 billion.
Zscaler stock’s slide from a 52-week high of $336.99 to current levels reflects multiple compression, not business deterioration. Zscaler carries a forward P/E ratio of 30x and a price-to-sales ratio of 7.39x, still elevated for a company posting GAAP net losses.
Moreover, Zscaler’s organic ARR growth of 21%, excluding the Red Canary acquisition, trails the reported 25% figure, a distinction that matters when investors scrutinize growth quality.
Meanwhile, competitors like Palo Alto Networks (NASDAQ:PANW) are sustaining non-GAAP operating margins above 30% for three consecutive quarters, and CrowdStrike (NASDAQ:CRWD) just reported ARR of $5.25 billion, up 24% year-over-year, with its first-ever positive GAAP net income. That’s the competitive bar Zscaler faces.
The broader analyst community remains constructive on ZS stock: 40 analysts carry Buy or Strong Buy ratings, with a consensus price target of $233.70. That’s a meaningful gap from current share prices. BTIG’s Neutral call is a signal worth heeding if you’re considering adding here.
The zero-trust security thesis remains intact. Zscaler CEO Jay Chaudhry’s assertion that “we’re just scratching the surface of this massive future growth opportunity” carries weight given the 91% year-over-year surge in enterprise AI usage across 3,400-plus applications.
A stock down sharply on strong earnings isn’t necessarily cheap. It may simply be finding fair value after years of premium pricing. Watch for whether Zscaler can demonstrate improving GAAP profitability and cleaner organic growth before concluding the re-rating story has fully played out.
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