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Palo Alto Networks to Acquire CyberArk for $25 Billion

Strategic acquisitions marks Palo Alto Networks’ formal entry into the identity security space and accelerates its platform strategy.

Palo Alto Networks

Palo Alto Networks (NASDAQ: PANW) has agreed to acquire identity security powerhouse CyberArk (NASDAQ: CYBR) in a deal valued at roughly $25 billion.

Palo Alto believes the move will accelerate its platform strategy and marks its formal entry into identity security.

“Our market entry strategy has always been to enter categories at their inflection point, and we believe that moment for Identity Security is now,” Nikesh Arora, Chairman and CEO of Palo Alto Networks, said.

Palo Alto believes the integration of CyberArk’s Identity Security Platform with Palo Alto Networks’ existing offerings will deliver significant benefits by accelerating the platform strategy through a unified solution that eliminates security gaps and simplifies operations.

CyberArk’s capabilities will be integrated into Palo Alto Networks’ Strata and Cortex platforms, using AI to provide identity-aware security and real-time response across the enterprise. As autonomous Agentic AI becomes more prevalent, Identity Security will serve as a critical framework, enforcing just-in-time access and least privilege to ensure that AI agents operate securely and only with the necessary permissions, enabling safe, large-scale AI-driven automation.

“Today, the rise of AI and the explosion of machine identities have made it clear that the future of security must be built on the vision that every identity requires the right level of privilege controls, not the ‘IAM fallacy’,” Arora, added.

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Under the terms of the definitive agreement, CyberArk shareholders will receive $45.00 in cash and 2.2005 shares of Palo Alto Networks common stock for each CyberArk share.

In a research note to investors, Jefferies analysts believe the move strengthens Palo Alto’s position in AI and augments its Zero Trust capabilities with a full stack of identity solutions. The analysts also said the acquisition “provides a meaningful cross-sell opportunity given the enterprise customer base overlap.” The firm currently has a price target on Palo Alto Networks of $215 per share.

The transaction is expected to close during the second half of Palo Alto Networks’ fiscal 2026.

Written By

For more than 15 years, Mike Lennon has been closely monitoring the threat landscape and analyzing trends in the National Security and enterprise cybersecurity space. In his role at SecurityWeek, he oversees the editorial direction of the publication and is founder and director of several leading cybersecurity industry conferences around the world.

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