CrowdStrike stock: how its own partners triggered a sell-off today

by

CrowdStrike Holdings Inc (NASDAQ: CRWD) is inching lower on Mar 27 after partner Anthropic previewed a “breakthrough” AI model with advanced cybersecurity capabilities it’s calling Claude Mythos.

Adding to the pressure are reports of Amazon.com Inc, another one of CRWD’s partners, developing a sophisticated artificial intelligence tool to handle sales, business development, and other tasks.

Following today’s decline, CrowdStrike stock is down some 22% versus its year-to-date high.

Why Claude Mythos is bearish for CRWD stock

According to Anthropic’s leaked draft, its next-gen AI model features autonomous threat-hunting capabilities that may bypass third-party firewalls and endpoint protections from the likes of CRWD.

It’s reasonable to assume that if Anthropic’s large language models (LLMs) succeed at identifying, sandboxing, and patching vulnerabilities independently, CrowdStrike will have a “difficult time” justifying its rather stretched 381x forward multiple.

CRWD shares are losing on Friday mostly because of investor concerns that, as AI models become “cyber-aware” at the kernel level, the company’s detect-and-respond moat could erode, turning its premium pricing into a redundant expense.

Note that CrowdStrike’s relative strength index (14-day) sits at about 36 currently – indicating it’s not yet “oversold”.

Simply put, the RSI reading suggests there may be room for further downside ahead.

Why Amazon news is bearish for CrowdStrike shares

Investors are bailing on CrowdStrike shares also due to reports that Amazon is working on an AI tool that could handle sales and business development-related tasks.

That’s a significant blow to the strategic agreement CRWD signed with the tech titan in September 2025, which positioned its Falco Go as the primary security layer for Amazon Business Prime.

While the Mythos news undermines CrowdStrike’s technical moat, the reports of AMNZ’s internal AI agents strike at the distribution and partnership moat that it has spent years building.

In short, it signals a potential “partner-to-competitor” pivot that threatens CRWD’s revenue growth as well as enterprise dominance.

At writing, CrowdStrike sits decisively below its major moving averages (MAs), indicating bears are firmly in control across multiple timeframes.

Should you buy the dip in CrowdStrike Holdings?

Despite the headline risk, CRWD stock may be attractive for long-term investors to buy on the dip, given the firm’s record $5.25 billion annual recurring revenue (ARR).

The company’s return to GAAP profitability in fiscal 2026 suggests its “land-and-expand” strategy remains unrivaled.

More importantly, AI could actually prove a major tailwind for CrowdStrike over time. Why?

Because it compresses “breakout times” to minutes, forcing enterprises to abandon manual tools for its machine-speed Falcon platform.

This is why Wall Street analysts remain bullish on CRWD, with the mean price target of roughly $492 indicating potential upside of more than 30% from here.

The post CrowdStrike stock: how its own partners triggered a sell-off today appeared first on Invezz

You may also like