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Thursday’s Exclusive Story
3 Cybersecurity Stocks Where Insiders Are Making Big Moves
Author: Leo Miller. Article Posted: 4/1/2026.
KEY POINTS
- Palo Alto Networks’ CEO purchased nearly $10 million in company stock amid a sharp sell-off, boosting his direct ownership by roughly 25%.
- Insider sales at CrowdStrike and Rubrik were tied to tax obligations on vesting RSUs and predetermined trading plans—not bearish bets.
- Only a small fraction of companies have ramped up cyber spending to address AI-driven threats, even as AI adoption widens the attack surface.
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Along with many other parts of the market, cybersecurity stocks have taken a big tumble in recent months. This includes names such as Palo Alto Networks (NASDAQ: PANW) and CrowdStrike (NASDAQ: CRWD). Both are down more than 15% year-to-date in 2026 and roughly 30% below their 52-week highs. Smaller players like Rubrik (NYSE: RBRK) have seen even larger declines, with shares down about 50% this year.
Much of the selling reflects broader concerns about disruption from artificial intelligence (AI). Some argue AI tools can find and repair vulnerabilities more effectively than traditional platforms. But markets may be underestimating the new cybersecurity risks AI creates.
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Boston Consulting Group, arguably the most respected consulting firm in the world, notes that AI systems embedded in organizations are themselves becoming targets that bad actors can exploit. Meanwhile, only 5% of companies have increased their cyber spending to combat AI threats, and 70% of organizations struggle to attract the talent needed to manage those risks. That supports the case for cybersecurity becoming more important, not less.
Insider trading activity across cybersecurity stocks paints an interesting picture for investors amid this sell-off.
PANW CEO Ups Stake Big-Time as Shares Tank
In late March, Palo Alto Networks CEO Nikesh Arora purchased just under $10 million worth of his company’s stock at an average price near $147. The stock rallied roughly 5% the next trading day after the news.
Arora evidently viewed the sell-off as an opportunity to buy the dip. Despite the market pressure, Palo Alto has continued to deliver solid financial results: it has reported revenues at or above expectations in each of its last four quarters and has posted significant beats on adjusted earnings per share.
Trailing 12-month revenue growth is roughly 15%–16%, a modest acceleration from about 14% in the comparable period in 2025. The company’s operating margin improved by 190 basis points in the latest quarter to 30.3%.
Palo Alto has pushed back on AI-disruption fears. In its last earnings call, Arora said he was “confused why the market is treating AI as a threat.” He added, “As enterprises start putting more critical functionality in the hands of AI, they will want control of AI agents or of their AI infrastructure, and that requires more security. So, I think generally it’s a positive trend towards more security adoption.”
Those comments help explain Arora’s large purchase, which increased his direct ownership in PANW by nearly 25%, and they align with Boston Consulting Group’s view that AI will raise the stakes for security.
CRWD and RBRK Sales: Red Flags or Business as Usual?
By contrast, recent insider selling at CrowdStrike and Rubrik could alarm investors. In March, insiders at CrowdStrike — including CEO George Kurtz and President Michael Sentonas — sold a combined $28.1 million worth of CRWD shares. Rubrik insiders, including director John Thompson and CFO Choudary Kiran Kumar, sold roughly $6.6 million of stock.
At first glance, those sales might offset Arora’s bullish signal. But each sale had mitigating circumstances and therefore doesn’t necessarily signal negative sentiment. Thompson’s sales were made under a prearranged 10b5-1 plan — scheduled well in advance — indicating routine liquidity management rather than a bearish view on RBRK.
Most other sales were similarly procedural. Every CRWD filing from March includes the line: “All reported sales were made to cover tax withholdings due on vesting of restricted stock unit (RSUs) awards, as required under the Issuer’s administrative policies.” The RBRK filing from Choudary Kiran Kumar contains a similar statement.
Because those insiders were selling to cover tax withholding on vested RSUs — a routine obligation — the transactions do not necessarily reflect bearish views about their companies.
Bullish Insider Buys Still Require Patience
Overall, Arora’s purchase is a clear bullish signal for PANW and, to some extent, for the cybersecurity sector, which faces many of the same headwinds. Given the circumstances behind the CRWD and RBRK sales, those transactions don’t negate the bullish implications of the PANW buy.
That said, insider purchases don’t always produce immediate or lasting changes in sentiment. For example, Nike’s (NYSE: NKE) CEO bought $1 million worth of shares near $61 at the end of 2025; despite an initial spike, NKE has since fallen below $55.
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