This $700 stock ‘lost’ 75% overnight, but here’s why Wall Street isn’t panicking

This $700 stock ‘lost’ 75% overnight, but here’s why Wall Street isn’t panicking

CrowdStrike stock (NASDAQ: CRWD) looked like it had fallen off a cliff on Thursday, with the stock moving from roughly $773 at Wednesday’s close to about $193 on split-adjusted screens.

The scary-looking drop was not a selloff, but a company’s scheduled 4-for-1 stock split taking effect.

Investors who held one share now hold four, each priced at roughly one-quarter of the old level.

It means the total value of the position remains unchanged.

CrowdStrike stock split: What actually happened

CrowdStrike’s 4-for-1 split took effect on July 2, after the company distributed additional shares following the July 1 close.

Shareholders of record as of June 25 received three extra shares for every one share they already owned, the company said when it reported first-quarter results.

Trading was expected to begin on a split-adjusted basis on July 2.

The math is straightforward as a shareholder with one CrowdStrike share worth about $773 on Wednesday would now hold four shares worth about $193 each, before any normal market moves.

A holding worth $7,730 across 10 shares becomes a holding worth roughly the same amount across 40 shares.

That is why the headline number looks dramatic, but the economics do not. A stock split does not change market capitalisation, ownership percentage, revenue, profit or cash flow.

It simply lowers the per-share price and increases the share count by the same proportion.

Companies often split shares after a strong run to make the stock appear more accessible to retail investors and employees.

MarketWatch said the stock closed at $772.74 on July 1, its fifth straight gain, and was only 1.64% below its 52-week high of $785.66 reached on June 1.

Why Wall Street isn’t blinking

Analysts are not treating the apparent 75% fall as a fundamental event because it is not one. The more important debate is whether CrowdStrike stock can keep growing fast enough to justify a rich valuation.

The bull case remains strong with Wells Fargo’s Michael Turrin raising his price target on CrowdStrike from $500 to $900 while maintaining a Buy rating.

The analyst cited checks that showed enterprise customers were still prioritising platform-based security spending.

The broader analyst backdrop is also constructive.

As per FactSet data, estimates from 47 analysts put CrowdStrike’s average 12-month target at $720.93 before the split adjustment, with forecasts ranging from $413 to $825.

It also showed a Buy consensus across 53 covering analysts, with 41 Buy ratings, 12 Holds and no Sells.

There is still a cautious camp as Bernstein’s Peter Weed kept a Market Perform rating and raised his target to $413 from $368.

The concern is valuation, not the split as TradingKey also noted worries that annual recurring revenue growth could slow below 25% and said the stock was trading at about 137 times forward earnings.