NEW YORK, Feb 18, 2026, 05:11 (EST) — Premarket
- Fortinet hovered around $81.69 ahead of the bell, unchanged after sliding 4.5% the previous day.
- Freedom Capital Markets cut its rating on the cybersecurity firm to “Hold” from “Buy,” sticking with the $90 price target.
- Palo Alto Networks just sounded a note of caution, and now traders are scanning the horizon for signals in the upcoming cybersecurity earnings.
Fortinet Inc was flat in U.S. premarket action on Wednesday, sitting at $81.69 after shares slid 4.5% in the last session. (Investing)
This shift is notable. Investors have shown little patience for “good, but priced in” results across software lately. Cybersecurity stocks have felt the pinch too—despite boards still opening their wallets for compliance and protection.
Fortinet’s newest issue is its valuation—no big splashy product headlines this time. Earlier this month, the focus was different; investors had their eyes on demand cues and how quickly customers were upgrading network equipment.
Freedom Capital Markets’ Almas Almaganbetov cut Fortinet’s rating to “Hold” from “Buy,” sticking with a $90 price target. The analyst cited “current valuation levels” as the reason for pulling back. (Streetinsider)
Almaganbetov, in that same note, highlighted a recent beat and continued service growth linked to Unified SASE — that’s secure access service edge, the cloud-based package of networking and security tools. Still, he flagged that customers remain wary about contract durations, and the cost environment isn’t getting any easier.
Palo Alto Networks shares tumbled almost 8% in after-hours trading after the company slashed its annual profit outlook, blaming higher costs tied to recent acquisitions. Cybersecurity stocks broadly felt the pressure. (Reuters)
The next round of sector earnings just got more important. Investors are eyeing Zscaler’s numbers on Feb. 26, followed by CrowdStrike on March 3—both seen as key markers for security budgets and contract renewals. (Investopedia)
Fortinet faces a clear threat if “valuation” ends up morphing into a fundamentals debate. Should customers delay orders, push for cheaper hardware, or drag security purchases through extended procurement cycles, shares could be stuck in place—regardless of what the rest of the market does.
Traders are eyeing whether Tuesday’s drop tempts dip-buyers, or if the move sparks a deeper slide in a sector preoccupied with guidance and multiples—not marketing.
Fortinet’s next big trigger is its earnings, slated for April 30 according to market calendars. Before that, results from peers over the next two weeks could shape FTNT’s direction. (Investing)