
CrowdStrike Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: CRWD) has heard the words Anthropic or Claude Code more than it would like. CRWD stock is down about 16% in 2026. Most of that drop had to do with the general malaise with frothy technology stocks.
Just as CRWD stock was beginning to hit its stride, it got derailed by not one, but two events tied to Anthropic. The first came in late February, when Anthropic launched Claude Code Security. That launch was right around CrowdStrike’s Q4 earnings report for its 2026 fiscal year.
Then in March, details came out about Claude Mythos. It’s an unreleased model that is more powerful than Claude Code Security. The source code behind Claude Code was also released.
The concern is that artificial intelligence (AI) can now handle a company’s cybersecurity. If true, that would mean a drastic rethinking of the pricing power and margins for CrowdStrike’s Falcon platform.
Sell the Rumor, Buy the News?
Markets love a good panic, and Anthropic handed them one on a platter. Claude Code Security was a research preview tool designed to identify high-severity software vulnerabilities and suggest fixes. Investors read that as an AI-native security product that could substitute for some of the work cybersecurity vendors sell today, which triggered a broad selloff in names.
Then the news leaked about Mythos as a major leap in capability and one that posed “unprecedented cybersecurity risks.” That amplified the same narrative: if Anthropic’s models can both defend and attack more effectively, the market may need to reprice what security vendors actually own as a moat.
But time is doing what it does, and that’s giving the truth time to come out. That paints a more realistic story about what Claude Code is and is not.
Claude Code Security is a research preview, strong on static code analysis but blind to runtime threats, cloud sprawl, or adaptive attacker moves. By contrast, CrowdStrike’s Falcon platform doesn't just scan—it's a full-stack platform for prevention, detection, and response across endpoints, identities, and networks. Anthropic's stumbles underscore the irony: leaks like these prove why robust security matters more than ever, especially as AI empowers smarter phishing and exploits.
CrowdStrike's AI-native roots let it harness these models rather than fear them. CEO George Kurtz calls it a breakout edge—agentic AI threats demand platforms that automate at scale. Post-earnings volume screamed capitulation; the 5.7% snapback by April 1 shows buyers piling in.
CRWD Stock May Be Running Out of Sellers
Whenever investors begin to favor cybersecurity stocks again, CRWD stock will be a beneficiary. But for now, investors are in a state of limbo. On the one hand, the stock appears to be recovering, but that may keep new money out. On the other hand, analysts are lowering their price targets.
To be fair, many analysts still believe CRWD stock has 20% or more upside. But it was just a month ago that many price targets for the stock were at or above $600. The CrowdStrike analyst forecast on MarketBeat shows no recent price targets with a “6” handle.
However, the upshot from the Claude Code fallout isn’t an indictment of CrowdStrike’s business model. In fact, it may remind investors of why the company’s AI-native Falcon platform makes the company well-positioned for managing the threat matrix from agentic AI.
That could make CRWD stock a buy. The high selling volume after the company’s earnings report in February may have been a sign of capitulation, but buyers have been coming in, and the stock is now up moderately over the last month.

Claude: Reality Check, Not Existential Threat
To put what’s happening to CRWD stock in terms sport fans can understand, CrowdStrike was the team that was on an unprecedented winning streak. Analytics and conventional wisdom both made it clear that the streak can’t go on, but it did...until it didn’t. But with CrowdStrike as with sports teams, the next result isn’t a prolonged losing streak; it’s usually a reversion to the mean.
The mean for CrowdStrike is a best-of-breed stock in a high-demand sector. But first, it's getting back to normal.
Normal may be painful for investors who bought CrowdStrike at or near the top. But the company’s strong annual recurring revenue (ARR) and growing customer base suggest that time is all CRWD stock needs.
Analysts dialed back targets from $600+ to the $400s, but 20% upside lingers. ARR climbs, customers stick, and cyber spend surges amid rising risks. This isn't a streak snapped—it's a pullback to fair value in a must-have sector. Patient hands get rewarded.
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The article "CrowdStrike Stock Drops on AI Fears—Is This a Buying Opportunity?" first appeared on MarketBeat.