Company Overview

Cloudflare sits in a position that very few technology companies occupy: it is simultaneously a cybersecurity company, a cloud infrastructure provider, a content delivery network, and increasingly, the default operating layer for how AI agents interact with the internet. CEO Matthew Prince put it plainly on the Q1 FY2026 call: “AI is driving a fundamental re-platforming of the internet and a paradigm shift in how software is created and consumed; it’s shaping up to be the biggest tailwind we’ve ever seen.” The market, which spent years valuing Cloudflare as an expensive but impressive security-and-networking company, is now repricing it as something more fundamental to the AI infrastructure stack.

Yesterday, that repricing accelerated. Scotiabank upgraded Cloudflare to Sector Outperform from Sector Perform and raised its price target to $300 from $225, after analyst Patrick Colville spent more than four weeks doing a deeper dive on the company’s opportunity. The stock surged 9% in a session where the Nasdaq 100 fell 1.3% — one of the clearest technical signals available: a stock making a 52-week high on a day the broader market sells off is telling you something about institutional conviction. Cloudflare’s chief strategy officer has noted that more than half of the firm’s web requests now originate from AI agents — a statistic that reframes what Cloudflare’s traffic data actually represents and why the upgrade thesis carries unusual weight.

Key Technical and Fundamental Drivers

Yesterday’s Scotiabank Upgrade → $300 Target, Four Weeks of Research Behind It
Scotiabank analyst Patrick Colville upgraded Cloudflare to Outperform and raised his price target to $300, representing about 20% upside from the prior close, after spending more than four weeks analyzing the company’s opportunity. Colville’s upgrade rests on three pillars: Workers becoming the default infrastructure for vibe coded applications including OpenAI Codex Sites and Lovable; traffic trends that historically precede revenue by three quarters inflecting upward due to agentic AI demand; and Cloudflare winning what he called the “best of the best” AI-native customers, validating the company’s architectural approach. A four-week research process preceding an upgrade is unusual — it signals genuine conviction rather than a momentum-chasing call.

Workers Platform → The Default Runtime for Agentic AI Applications
Colville highlighted Workers becoming the default infrastructure for vibe coded applications — AI-generated software built through platforms like OpenAI Codex Sites and Lovable — as a dynamic underappreciated by investors. Cloudflare’s July 1 launch of Monetization Gateway, which expands its Pay Per Crawl service into Pay Per Use through the open x402 protocol, allows website owners to charge AI agents for access on a per-use basis — a product that didn’t exist a year ago and directly monetizes AI traffic flowing through Cloudflare’s network. The Workers platform processes AI agent requests at the edge, closer to the end user, at dramatically lower latency than centralized cloud alternatives.

Traffic Trends Lead Revenue by Three Quarters → H2 2026 Beat Setup
Scotiabank notes that Cloudflare’s traffic trends historically precede revenue by approximately three quarters, and that those trends are now accelerating as demand for agentic AI applications increases — a setup that Colville believes positions Cloudflare to beat and raise Wall Street estimates by approximately five percentage points during the second half of 2026. If that three-quarter lead time holds, the traffic data Cloudflare is seeing today becomes revenue in Q3 and Q4 — making the Q2 earnings report the first financial confirmation of a trend that is already visible in the network data.

Q1 FY2026 Results → 34% Revenue Growth, 73% Jump in $1M+ Deals
Q1 2026 revenue of $639.8 million grew 34% year-over-year, with deals over $1 million rising 73% — making Q1 its largest-customer quarter on record. EPS of $0.25 exceeded expectations by $0.02, and revenue of $639.75 million surpassed the $620.83 million projection. Management simultaneously announced a 20% workforce reduction of approximately 1,100 employees to pivot toward an agentic AI-first operating model, incurring $140–$150 million in restructuring charges — a bold structural decision that CEO Prince described as “the biggest change I’ve made in Cloudflare’s history.” The combination of record customer growth and a deliberate workforce restructuring signals a company betting its internal operating model on the same AI thesis it is selling to customers.

Q2 Guidance → $664–$665 Million, Full-Year $2.81 Billion
Cloudflare projects fiscal year 2026 EPS of $1.19 to $1.20, with Q2 guidance calling for $0.27 per share and revenue of $664 to $665 million — the next hard catalyst that will test whether the agentic AI traffic inflection Scotiabank is modeling is showing up in the financials. NET trades at 38x trailing sales and approximately 200x forward P/E, making its Q2 revenue guidance of approximately $665 million a critical validation test for the premium valuation. If Cloudflare beats and raises — as Scotiabank’s model implies — the upgrade thesis gets confirmed in real time. If revenue merely meets guidance, the 38x sales multiple leaves limited room for disappointment.

Market Takeaway

Cloudflare’s 9% gain on a day the Nasdaq fell 1.3% is the market telling you something specific: this is not a stock being carried by the AI infrastructure tide. It is a stock being repriced on its own fundamentals, in its own narrative, by an analyst who spent a month studying the opportunity before publishing. The agentic AI thesis behind the Scotiabank upgrade — that more than half of Cloudflare’s web requests now come from AI agents, that Workers is becoming the default runtime for AI-generated applications, and that traffic data leads revenue by three quarters — is a specific, verifiable, and falsifiable claim. The Q2 earnings print is the first financial test of that claim.

The risks are real and the valuation is the primary one. Cloudflare trades at over 39 times sales currently, and Scotiabank’s Colville acknowledged the demanding multiple in the upgrade note itself while arguing the scale of the AI opportunity justifies the premium. Insider selling adds a layer of caution: co-founder Michelle Zatlyn divested 25,641 shares on June 18 and CFO Thomas Seifert sold 10,000 shares on June 17 — routine RSU-vesting activity in many cases, but worth monitoring as the stock approaches new highs. Weiss Ratings maintains a Sell recommendation, and the consensus analyst target of $244.23 sits below where the stock currently trades, meaning Scotiabank’s $300 target is an outlier rather than the consensus view. For traders watching Thursday’s session, the key dynamic is whether NET can hold above $260 — the level it was approaching at yesterday’s close — as institutional buyers who missed the initial move assess whether the upgrade momentum has staying power into Q2 earnings. A stock that makes a 52-week high on a down day for the broader market, on a catalyst-driven upgrade backed by four weeks of research, tends to be worth watching carefully for more than a single session