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AI Stock Dip Alert: Time to Buy or Brace for More Pain?

AI Stock Dip Alert: Time to Buy or Brace for More Pain?

Author:
foolstock
Published:
2025-07-29 09:53:00
6
1

Tech investors are eyeing the latest AI stock slump—is this a golden entry point or a falling knife?

Market tremors hit AI darling as sector-wide correction takes hold. The stock’s 30% drop from its peak has bulls and bears locked in a tug-of-war.

Why the dip matters: AI remains the market’s favorite casino chip. Volatility comes standard.

Key levels to watch: If support at $XX breaks, analysts predict another 15% downside. Meanwhile, true believers are loading up—"It’s just algos shaking out weak hands," claims one over-leveraged Reddit trader.

Bottom line: In a sector where most companies burn cash faster than a Bitcoin miner in Texas summer, picking bottoms is a fool’s errand. But someone’s gotta do it.

A padlock image appears on a laptop.

Image source: Getty Images.

SentinelOne's place in the cybersecurity industry

As mentioned, SentinelOne stood out by building a cybersecurity platform from the ground up. This platform, called Singularity XDR, protects cloud workloads, endpoints, containers, and Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices. It detects, prevents, responds, and searches for threats through an AI-powered platform.

This mirrors its peer CrowdStrike as both companies have focused on endpoint protection. However, with companies often seeking to consolidate their cybersecurity needs, other companies compete in endpoint protection and other areas.

This, combined with the large number of cybersecurity companies, has made it a highly competitive industry, raising questions about whether SentinelOne can establish a meaningful competitive moat.

Amid the growing importance of the cloud and AI, demand for cybersecurity products that can protect these ecosystems has skyrocketed. Grand View Research forecasts a 13% compound annual growth rate (CAGR) for the cybersecurity industry through 2030. It estimates the industry's current size at $245 billion and forecasts that it will exceed $500 billion by 2030.

SentinelOne by the numbers

For now, SentinelOne only claims a small fraction of that business, though that factor has not hampered its growth. In the first quarter of its fiscal 2026 (ended April 30), revenue grew 23% to $229 million compared to year-ago levels.

Unfortunately, costs and expenses have grown nearly as rapidly as revenue, meaning its operating losses have widened. Additionally, the provision for income taxes in fiscal Q1 increased to $133 million, up from $1.5 million 12 months ago.

Consequently, net losses spiked to over $208 million, well above the $70 million loss in the first quarter of fiscal 2025. That rising loss stands in contrast to its fiscal 2025, when net losses fell by 15% to $288 million.

It may help somewhat that free cash FLOW for fiscal Q1 was $52 million, up from $41 million in the same period last year. Still, the rising net losses may alarm investors. While tech investors tend to be patient with unprofitable companies, seeing net losses rise when revenue increases can deter potential investors.

Moreover, peers such as CrowdStrike and Palo Alto have typically earned a profit in recent quarters, which does not make SentinelOne appear as promising in comparison.

Valuation comparisons may reflect that lack of confidence. SentinelOne's lack of profitability leaves it without a P/E ratio, though it sells at a price-to-sales (P/S) ratio of 7. That may seem cheap considering Palo Alto's sales multiple of 16 and CrowdStrike's 28 P/S ratio.

Nonetheless, with profitability unlikely to occur in the foreseeable future, it is worth asking whether that discounted sales multiple is sufficient to draw investors to SentinelOne stock.

Should you buy the dip in SentinelOne stock?

SentinelOne stock is not for risk-averse investors, although investors who can tolerate the risk may have a buy case. Indeed, the ongoing net losses may give prospective investors pause despite the much lower P/S ratio. Heavy competition within the cybersecurity industry may also cause concern.

However, investors should also note the continued revenue growth and rising free cash flow. The growing revenue should push its low sales multiple down further, which could attract more buyers. It also means SentinelOne may not need to dilute shares or turn to debt to pay its bills.

Regarding competitive concerns, SentinelOne's revenue growth is significantly above the 13% industry CAGR. This industry expansion should give the company more prospective customers, increasing the chances that SentinelOne will continue to grow despite competitive threats.

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