Key Highlights
- Shares of Fastly plummeted 37% to $19.94 following Q1 results that failed to meet investor expectations for AI-driven growth, even as the company exceeded earnings and revenue projections.
- The company posted Q1 EPS of $0.13, surpassing analyst forecasts of $0.09; revenue climbed 20% to reach $173.02 million, exceeding the consensus of $171.8 million.
- The security segment, which reflects AI-related traffic monetization, generated $38.8 million in revenue — a 47% year-over-year increase that barely edged past the $34.9 million projection.
- Management increased full-year 2026 revenue projections to a range of $710M–$725M and elevated profit expectations to $0.27–$0.33 per share.
- Analysts at Piper Sandler reduced their price objective to $27 from $30 while keeping a Neutral stance, expressing worries about potential growth deceleration.
Fastly (FSLY) unveiled its Q1 2026 financial results following Wednesday’s market close, delivering figures that exceeded analyst predictions — yet the market response proved dramatically negative.
Shares had climbed more than 210% year-to-date before the earnings announcement. Such remarkable momentum created elevated expectations that the company ultimately failed to satisfy.
The edge computing provider delivered Q1 earnings of $0.13 per share, representing a significant improvement from the $0.05 per share loss recorded in the same period last year and exceeding Wall Street’s $0.09 projection. Revenue advanced 20% year-over-year to $173.02 million, surpassing the analyst consensus of $171.8 million.
These results would typically signal a successful quarter. However, market participants had their attention fixed elsewhere.
Investors primarily scrutinized security revenue — the business line where AI-generated traffic appears in Fastly’s financial statements. This segment produced $38.8 million, representing 47% growth compared to the prior year, yet barely exceeded the $34.9 million analyst projection.
For shares valued on expectations of AI-powered expansion, such a modest outperformance fell short of requirements.
FSLY declined 37% to close at $19.94 during Thursday’s trading session.
Evercore ISI analyst Peter Levine noted the dramatic decline was “exacerbated” by weaker-than-anticipated network services revenue and disappointing compute sales results, compounding the already heightened investor expectations surrounding the quarterly report.
Breaking Down the Financial Performance
Fastly’s large customer base expanded to 634 accounts in Q1, marking a 39% increase from the comparable period last year. The company has also succeeded in negotiating larger minimum commitments from its client base, suggesting enhanced contract quality and customer confidence.
Looking toward Q2, management provided guidance calling for revenue between $170 million and $176 million, with EPS ranging from $0.05 to $0.08 — both metrics exceeding previous Wall Street projections of $169.8 million in revenue and $0.04 in earnings per share.
The company also elevated its full-year 2026 outlook. Fastly currently anticipates revenue falling within a $710 million to $725 million range, representing an increase from the previous $700 million to $720 million forecast. Earnings per share guidance was adjusted upward to $0.27–$0.33, from the earlier $0.23–$0.29 projection.
Analyst consensus estimates for the full year stand at $0.28 EPS on $712 million in revenue — Fastly’s updated guidance encompasses these figures comfortably.
Wall Street Weighs In
Piper Sandler revised its price target downward to $27 from $30 while maintaining a Neutral rating on the stock. The firm highlighted that Fastly’s core content delivery business experienced sequential volume declines that fell short of expectations, while more challenging pricing comparisons await in the coming quarters.
Piper Sandler also expressed broader concerns regarding potential growth deceleration, particularly noting that FSLY commands a premium valuation on an EV/revenue-to-growth basis relative to industry peers.
Executive leadership emphasized that the company’s Compute@Edge platform has witnessed expanding AI-related usage, while the Security product line continues demonstrating robust cross-selling momentum with existing customers.
The company has announced plans to host an analyst day on September 23, 2026.

