CrowdStrike filed a clean beat on June 3 and then announced a 4-for-1 stock split in the same breath. The market cheered. The stock was already up more than 65% over the prior month heading into that print. So the real question now isn’t whether the quarter was good — it was — the question is whether any of this still trades as a setup, or whether the easy money is simply gone.
Here’s the actual print. Q1 FY2027 revenue came in at $1.39 billion, up 26% year over year, ahead of the $1.36 billion consensus. Adjusted EPS landed at $1.10, up 51% and beating the $1.07 estimate. Annual recurring revenue hit a record $5.5 billion, growing 24% year over year. And net new ARR — the metric that historically drives the post-earnings move for CRWD — came in at $256 million, up 32% year over year, well above the $250 million threshold the market had flagged as the line in the sand.
So every number cleared. Guidance was raised. And then, almost as a kicker, the board announced a four-for-one split of Class A shares, with a record date of June 25, 2026, and split-adjusted trading beginning July 2.
The Split: What It Changes for Options Traders
Structurally, the split doesn’t change the business. A pre-split price around $748 implies a post-split price near $187, and your total position value stays the same. But here’s what does change: options contracts will be adjusted to reflect the new share count and strike prices, and the lower nominal price tends to draw in more retail options flow. That’s not inherently good or bad — it just means the open interest profile shifts, the bid-ask spreads often compress near ATM strikes, and the volatility surface can reprice as a new wave of participants enters.
What’s interesting here is the timing. The split record date is June 25. Split-adjusted trading begins July 2. That overlaps with Q2 earnings season setup. Traders who hold pre-split options through July 2 will see their contracts automatically adjusted — strike prices divided by four, contract multiplier held constant. For anyone building a position right now, that mechanics question matters more than most are tracking.
Options Flow: Where the Market Is Positioned
Heading into the June 3 print, the options market had priced an expected move of roughly 8.8% in either direction — and the actual post-earnings reaction stayed within that band. Post-earnings IV crush is now in play. Elevated implied volatility that was pricing in the event uncertainty has compressed, which generally favors premium sellers and punishes naked long options buyers who waited for the report.
With CRWD trading near all-time highs and the 4-for-1 split creating a structural shift in the options chain around July 2, the near-term setup has three distinct reads.
- Bull case: If you believe FY27 net new ARR guidance of 520 basis points of growth at the midpoint continues to hold — and that Falcon Flex’s $3.2 billion in total deal value signals durable cross-sell momentum — a defined-risk call spread in the August expiration cycle (post-split adjusted) gives directional exposure without the elevated IV risk of a pre-split straddle.
- Bear case: CRWD is currently trading at roughly 154 times forward earnings. The stock has surged 394% over three years. Insider selling has been active, with approximately $138.4 million in shares sold over the prior three months. A put spread structure targeting a pullback to the mid-split $160s provides defined-risk downside exposure for traders who believe the valuation disconnect eventually matters.
- Neutral case: A post-earnings iron condor capturing premium compression in the July cycle — entered after the split-adjusted chain stabilizes around July 2 — is the lower-delta play for traders who simply want to sell the elevated IV that tends to re-inflate ahead of the next earnings cycle in early September.
What to Watch From Here
The FY27 guidance raise was the most important thing in the print. Management pushed net new ARR growth guidance up by 520 basis points at the midpoint — that’s not a minor revision. It’s a signal that Falcon Flex adoption is accelerating and that the post-outage recovery narrative has fully converted into actual ARR momentum.
Slight tangent: the cybersecurity sector broadly posted positive sentiment in May, with the group up 16.4% on average over the prior month. CRWD outperformed that by a wide margin. The question going forward is whether the whole sector re-rates or whether CrowdStrike’s premium simply gets compressed back toward peers as the split brings in more distributed shareholders with tighter time horizons.
The split doesn’t change the fundamental picture. But it does change the trading picture — and for options traders, that distinction is everything right now. Watch the July 2 chain open for post-split volume behavior. That will tell you more about where retail conviction sits than any analyst note published this week.
