Radware (RDWR) Q1 2026 Earnings Transcript

Source The Motley Fool
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Image source: The Motley Fool.

Date

Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET

Call participants

  • Chief Executive Officer — Roy Zisapel
  • Chief Financial Officer — Guy Avidan

Takeaways

  • Revenue -- $79.8 million, growing 11% year over year, marking the fourth quarter of double-digit growth in the past five quarters.
  • Cloud ARR -- Grew 23% year over year to $98 million, and increased to 39% of total ARR, up from 35% in the first quarter of 2025.
  • Total ARR -- Increased 9% year over year to $250 million.
  • Americas revenue -- Reached $38.4 million, increasing 40% year over year; nearly 50% of total revenue now derives from this region.
  • EMEA revenue -- Decreased 11% year over year to $25.1 million; on a trailing 12-month basis, EMEA revenue increased 8% year over year.
  • APAC revenue -- Flat at $16.3 million compared with the first quarter last year; 3% growth on a trailing 12-month basis.
  • Gross margin -- 82.2%, consistent with 82.4% in the prior-year period; memory component cost increases exerted pressure, offset by a favorable revenue mix.
  • Operating income -- $11 million, up 4% year over year, while operating margin declined by 90 basis points to 13.8%, primarily due to a negative $2.6 million currency impact from the strengthening of the Israeli shekel.
  • Financial income -- $4.5 million, down from $5.2 million in the prior year, attributed to lower market rates and smaller cash balances following share repurchases.
  • Effective tax rate -- 14.3% compared to 13.7% in the first quarter of 2025; full-year expectation set at 14%-15%.
  • Net income from continued operations -- $13.4 million versus $13.6 million in the previous year’s first quarter.
  • Diluted earnings per share -- $0.30 compared to $0.31 in the first quarter a year prior.
  • Operating cash flow -- $19.9 million versus $24.6 million in the prior year’s quarter.
  • Share repurchases -- $29.4 million of shares repurchased this quarter.
  • Liquidity -- $434 million in cash, equivalents, bank deposits, and marketable securities at period end.
  • Fiscal Q2 2026 guidance — revenue -- Expected between $81 million and $82 million.
  • Fiscal Q2 2026 guidance — non-GAAP operating expenses -- Projected to be $56 million-$57 million, including approximately $2 million in currency impact from the weakening U.S. dollar.
  • Fiscal Q2 2026 guidance — EPS -- Non-GAAP diluted net earnings per share expected between $0.28 and $0.29.
  • Cloud and hybrid demand -- "Cloud security is driving our growth," with direct reference to strong demand for application security, hybrid DDoS, and new API security offerings.
  • API security -- API security solution cited as one of the fastest-growing areas, with "tens of projects in various stages," and management highlighted immediate and robust traction as of Q1.
  • Partnerships and commercial wins -- Secured a large Latin American government project across multiple cloud modules, and launched a new DDoS protection service (Go Shield Pro) through Chief Telecom in Taiwan.
  • Product performance -- DefensePro X highlighted for “outstanding quarter,” with repeat refresh activity in marquee accounts spanning SaaS, e-commerce, and U.S. healthcare.
  • Go-to-market model -- North American adoption of a hunter/farmer strategy produced measurable business traction, with plans to roll out globally.
  • Supply chain & cost management -- CFO Guy Avidan noted: "During the quarter, we experienced supply chain pressure, primarily driven by higher memory components costs," with ongoing efforts to mitigate through pricing and procurement discipline.
  • Hardware price action -- Roy Zisapel stated: "We did increase price lists by 5% to 8%” on certain hardware as a response to cost pressures, with changes going into effect at the end of fiscal Q2.
  • Discontinued operations -- SkyHawk segment is now classified as discontinued; all current financials exclude this unit, and the Hawk segment is no longer separately reported.

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Risks

  • Guy Avidan stated: "we experienced supply chain pressure, primarily driven by higher memory components costs," and these cost pressures are expected to persist in the near term, potentially impacting gross margin.
  • Operating margin declined by 90 basis points to 13.8%, with CFO attributing a negative $2.6 million impact to currency exchange, specifically the strengthening Israeli shekel.
  • Guidance reflects higher non-GAAP operating expenses due to both continued investment in innovation, and a projected $2 million headwind from U.S. dollar weakening in fiscal Q2 2026.
  • Financial income in fiscal Q1 2026 decreased to $4.5 million due to lower market rates and reduced cash balances from share buybacks, with the CFO expecting further decreases throughout 2026.

Summary

The earnings call revealed that Radware (NASDAQ:RDWR) achieved double-digit revenue and cloud ARR growth, driven mainly by North American execution and rapid adoption of cloud and hybrid security solutions. Management provided explicit evidence of immediate momentum in API security, and highlighted DefensePro X’s penetration among large-scale enterprise customers. Geographic performance was mixed, with exceptional Americas growth contrasted by an EMEA decline and flat APAC results. Financial management strategies, including targeted hardware price increases, and ongoing cost discipline, are being implemented in response to persistent supply chain and currency headwinds.

  • CEO Roy Zisapel said, "API security, I think it's much more immediate. It's a very easy expansion of our platform, especially for our existing customers," emphasizing the near-term revenue potential of this segment.
  • The discontinued operations of the SkyHawk subsidiary, and elimination of the Hawk segment, clarify that reported figures now exclusively reflect ongoing business performance.
  • Total ARR fell by $1 million sequentially, which management explained was linked to annual contract expiration patterns and not an ongoing trend.

Industry glossary

  • ARR (Annual Recurring Revenue): The value of contracted recurring revenue components of subscriptions normalized to a one-year period, central to tracking growth and business model sustainability for security and infrastructure software companies.
  • MSSP (Managed Security Services Provider): A third-party company that remotely manages a customer’s IT security infrastructure and functions, enabling scalable cybersecurity and DDoS protection for clients.
  • DDoS (Distributed Denial-of-Service): A cybersecurity threat where attackers flood targeted servers or networks with excessive traffic to disrupt normal service and availability.
  • Agentic AI: Artificial intelligence systems that act with autonomous agency, introducing new cybersecurity risk vectors due to their broad access and decision-making capabilities.
  • POC (Proof of Concept): A demonstration or pilot deployment designed to validate feasibility, performance, or value of a technology solution before broad adoption.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Roy Zisapel: Thank you, Yisca, and thank you all for joining us today. We started 2026 with solid execution across the business and steady progress against our long-term strategic priorities, scaling our cloud security platform, growing our MSSP business, driving innovation and executing with discipline across regions and functions. In the first quarter, we delivered another quarter of double-digit growth in revenue, marking the fourth quarter of double-digit growth in the past 5 quarters. Revenue grew 11% year-over-year to $80 million, and EPS was $0.30. Cloud security is driving our growth. Cloud ARR grew 23% year-over-year in the quarter, supported by strong demand for application security, hybrid DDoS services and our new API security.

One cloud win example is with a large government institution in Latin America, where Radware was selected to secure critical applications and national-level digital infrastructure. The customer expanded its deployment across our full portfolio, including cloud application protection, API security and advanced DDoS mitigation. The decision was driven by our ability to deliver real-time protection at scale for highly sensitive mission-critical environments. Another cloud deal we secured is a new logo hybrid cloud DDoS deployment with a large global fintech company. The customer selected Radware DefensePro X appliances, combined with our cloud DDoS service to address escalating volumetric and low-and-slow attacks that were impacting payment availability.

I would like now to share with you why we're so excited about the opportunity Radware is seeing in the security market. At our Investor Day, we outlined 4 major waves of disruption shaping our journey in the cybersecurity market. DDoS, application security, API protection and now Agentic AI security. Radware operates at the intersection of all 4, a position that become more critical as attacks grow increasingly automated, distributed and AI-driven. In particular, our new API security solution is one of the fastest-growing areas of our portfolio and a meaningful contributor to our cloud security momentum.

Following the Pynt integration, the API security testing company we acquired, we now offer an end-to-end API security solution spanning discovery, posture management, testing and real-time runtime protection. We see strong customer traction with tens of projects in various stages across production deployments, upgrades, testing and POCs. We believe many of our customers will choose to standardize their API security on Radware as part of our broader application security platform, and we feel very encouraged by the momentum and visibility we have as we look ahead to the rest of the year. Next, AI continues to be both a catalyst and a clear differentiator for our platform.

Our long-standing investment in behavioral algorithms and AI-powered automation remains the key reason customers choose Radware, particularly as attackers leverage AI-powered automation and manual responses can no longer keep pace. In addition, advanced AI penetration and code scanning tools are accelerating vulnerability discovery and compressing the time between exposure and exploitation. This widens the gap between what organizations can identify and what they can realistically remediate, making prevention-only and shift left approaches increasingly insufficient. Radware addresses this challenge through real-time platform-based protection that secures application and infrastructure as attack occur. Our architecture is designed to operate at scale to stop zero-day exploits, API abuse and automated attack chains in production.

In this environment, new AI security tools do not replace our cybersecurity platform. They underscore the necessity for runtime protection that can keep pace with machine speed threats. We see this as a clear tailwind for our business. Furthermore, with the emergence of agentic AI and the broad access right granted to AI agents, a new and expanded attack surface must be protected. We introduced Agentic AI Protection last quarter, further expanding our cloud security platform. While still early, we are already seeing strong engagement as customers recognize that runtime protection is essential for their Agentic AI journey. From a go-to-market perspective, execution in North America remains a key priority and a significant contributor to growth.

Revenues from the Americas grew 40% year-over-year, representing nearly 50% of total revenues. Investments in leadership, sales coverage and partner engagement are translating into improved execution. Within our go-to-market framework, our MSSP business is increasingly becoming more pronounced. Led by large strategic MSSP partners, the momentum is accelerating globally. During the quarter, we made meaningful progress onboarding Tier 1 carriers and service providers and building a substantial pipeline across regions that we expect to convert in the second half of the year. To that end, we just announced this week a partnership with Chief Telecom from Taiwan.

Chief operates the Taipei Internet Exchange, which is the largest carrier-neutral Internet exchange in Taiwan and is the leading provider for direct private connections to global public clouds in the country. Through our partnership, Chief will provide Go Shield Pro, a new DDoS protection service for enterprises in Taiwan. The service combines Radware's AI-driven DDoS mitigation with Chief Telecom local network, enabling in-network scrubbing that minimizes latency. Delivered as a subscription, Godshield Pro provides immediate high-performance protection without the need for on-premise hardware.

On the product side, our on-premise DDoS protection solution, DefensePro X, had an outstanding quarter, driven by multiple large-scale refresh and expansion deals globally, including one of the largest SaaS companies in the world, a leading multinational e-commerce provider and one of the largest healthcare systems in the U.S. DefensePro X delivers unmatched performance, scale and resiliency, which customers consistently validate through repeat refresh and expansion activity. This powerful refresh cycle underscores the durability of our hybrid foundation while simultaneously accelerating subscription adoption. In summary, Q1 marked a very strong start to 2026 with solid execution across the business.

We delivered double-digit growth in revenues driven by cloud ARR, strong momentum with our new API security offering, continued strength in our hybrid portfolio led by DefensePro X and solid execution in North America. We continue to execute against our strategy and are well positioned for continued growth as we move through the year. With that, I'll turn the call over to Guy.

Guy Avidan: Thank you, Roy, and good day, everyone. I will review the financial results and business performance for the first quarter of 2026 as well as our outlook for the second quarter of 2026. Before beginning the financial overview, I would like to remind you that unless otherwise indicated, all financial results are non-GAAP. A full reconciliation of our results on a GAAP to non-GAAP basis is available in the press release issued earlier today and in the Investors section of our website. As announced last quarter, the results of our subsidiary, SkyHawk, have been classified as a discontinued operation effective the first quarter of 2026 and are presented accordingly.

As a result, all financial results discussed today related solely to continued operations. In connection with this change, the previously reported Hawk segment will no longer be presented separately. Comparative prior year figures have been adjusted to align with this presentation and ensure consistency. We started 2026 with a solid first quarter, delivering revenue of $79.8 million, representing a year-over-year growth of 11% and marking this the fourth quarter of double-digit growth for the past 5 quarters. Cloud security offerings continue to play an important role in our overall performance. Cloud ARR grew 23% year-over-year in the first quarter, reaching $98 million, increasing to 39% of total ARR, up from 35% in the first quarter of 2025.

This growth was the primary driver of total ARR, which increased 9% year-over-year to $250 million in the quarter. Looking at regional performance. In the first quarter, the Americas region delivered robust growth with revenue increasing 40% year-over-year to $38.4 million. On a trailing 12-month basis, revenue in the Americas grew 15% year-over-year. Revenue from the Americas region represent nearly 50% of total revenue, and we are encouraged by the momentum in the region, which is also reflected in the strong pipeline for the coming quarters. EMEA revenue in the first quarter was $25.1 million, a decrease of 11% year-over-year. On a trailing 12-month basis, revenue in the EMEA increased 8% year-over-year.

In APAC, first quarter revenue was $16.3 million, the same as in the first quarter last year. On a trailing 12-month basis, revenue in APAC increased 3% year-over-year. Turning to profitability. Gross margin was relatively consistent at 82.2% in the quarter compared to 82.4% in the same quarter last year. The slight change year-over-year reflects a favorable revenue mix, partially offset by supply chain and foreign exchange impacts. During the quarter, we experienced supply chain pressure, primarily driven by higher memory components costs. While this had a modest impact on gross margin, we are actively managing these dynamics through pricing and procurement. Looking ahead, we expect memory-related cost pressure to persist in the near term.

However, we believe we can manage it effectively and maintain margin discipline throughout the year. Operating income for the first quarter increased 4% year-over-year to $11 million, while operating margin declined by 90 basis points to 13.8%. Decline was directly impacted by a negative $2.6 million impact from currency exchange changes, predominantly the strengthening of the Israeli shekel. Constant exchange rate currency, the operating income for the first quarter would have been $13.6 million, a 28% increase year-over-year. Financial income for the first quarter was $4.5 million compared with $5.2 million in the same period last year. primarily reflecting lower market interest rate and reduced cash balances following share repurchase over the past 2 quarters.

Looking ahead, we expect financial income to gradually decrease over the remaining quarters of 2026, reflecting the same dynamics. Our effective tax rate for the first quarter was 14.3% compared to 13.7% in the same period of 2025. We expect the effective tax rate to be between 14% to 15% in the coming quarter. Net income from continued operations in Q1 2026 was $13.4 million compared to $13.6 million in Q1 2025. Diluted earnings per share from continued operations were $0.30 compared to $0.31 in the same period last year. Turning to cash and the balance sheet. Cash flow provided by continued operations in Q1 2026 was $19.9 million compared to $24.6 million in the same quarter last year.

During the first quarter, we repurchased shares in the amount of approximately $29.4 million. We ended the quarter with a strong liquidity position, holding approximately $434 million in cash, cash equivalents, bank deposits and marketable securities. And now to the guidance. Turning to our guidance to note that our operating expenses and EPS outlook reflect current foreign exchange rates. Strengthening of the Israeli shekel will impact operating expenses and EPS over the course of the year. We expect total revenue for the second quarter of 2026 to be in the range of $81 million to $82 million. We expect Q2 2026 non-GAAP operating expenses to be between $56 million to $57 million.

Expected increase in Q2 2026 OpEx versus the first quarter of 2026 reflect our continued investment in innovation and go-to-market, along with approximately $2 million of exchange rate impact associated with the U.S. dollar weakening. We expect Q2 2026 non-GAAP diluted net earnings per share to be between $0.28 and $0.29. With that, I'll turn the call back to the operator, and we'll be happy to take your questions.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] The first question is from Joe Gallo from Jefferies.

Joseph Gallo: Can you just walk through the total ARR performance a little bit in 1Q? Cloud was very strong but you saw a decline in total ARR of $1 million quarter-over-quarter. Can you just kind of walk through that dynamic and how we should think about total ARR growth in 2026?

Roy Zisapel: Yes. I think the trends that we've seen in Q1 happening to us generally almost every year, although this year, there was a small decline so far. And it's because many of the contracts are expiring end of the year, and then we might see some churn, which is not exactly linear throughout the quarters. But we do continue to expect strong cloud growth in the 20s, and we do expect, like we've guided before for ARR to continue between 8% to 9%. And as the cloud portion of the total ARR growing, that figure to continue to accelerate. Last year, I think in this period, we were at 7%, give or take, ARR growth.

Now we are at 9%, and we think that trend would continue to happen as we scale the cloud.

Joseph Gallo: Okay. That makes total sense. And then just as a follow-up, you mentioned memory-related costs will persist. How are you thinking about pricing? Are you able to kind of raise prices to offset some of that? And have you seen any changes in buying behavior related to memory costs from your customers?

Roy Zisapel: We just took an action and raised for some of the hardware platforms that are highly affected by memory. We did increase price lists by 5% to 8%. We didn't see yet a change in buying behavior, although those pricing changes will now go into effect end of Q2. Our customers will be made aware of that. And I believe there will be some acceleration in some of the hybrid projects. But I don't expect a major change. We didn't increase prices by 10% or 20%.

We are much more, I would say, disciplined in discounting to make sure gross margin stays intact and of course, pushing a lot of the cloud security, the API security and AI that are isolated from those memory and supply chain issues.

Operator: Our next question is from Jeffrey Hopson from Needham.

John Jeffrey Hopson: At your Analyst Day, you were talking a little bit about a new go-to-market strategy with a hunter/farmer model. Any update on where we are with that transition or any early contributions?

Roy Zisapel: So thanks a lot, Jeffrey. As we stated, North America was our first to execute this transition. And in the last several quarters, I think we've started to see very strong growth and contribution from this activity, and we believe that would continue as we progress. We're very happy with the initial results, both on farming and on hunting. We are now country by country. It depends on the situation globally. We are executing that in Europe and in Asia, and we believe that we would see the same results. So I think the model itself proved itself.

We're seeing very good results, not only in the numbers, by the way, which is the most important, but also in our strengthening customer relationships in the cross-sell and the broadening of the usage of our platforms in the key accounts. So we have many leading indicators to the improved business traction that we have, and we are continuing with implementation.

John Jeffrey Hopson: And you have new products in both API security and AI security that you've been highlighting. And I think those are going to be big longer-term drivers of growth. But do you expect like a large meaningful contribution from those products in 2026? Or are they still very early in the ramp?

Roy Zisapel: So it is very early. The AI security we just launched, I don't know, 3 months ago, and the sales cycles in enterprise are 6 to 9 months on the short side, I would say. However, as it relates to API security, I was actually -- we were actually very surprised with the strong traction already in Q1, and we were able to close double-digit number of customers orders already within that quarter, and the traction continues to be very, very strong. So API security, I think it's much more immediate. It's a very easy expansion of our platform, especially for our existing customers. It's enabling another module on the same cloud platform.

It's the same buyer, and we see a lot of interest in the market. So I actually would increase my expectations from API security contribution for 2026 versus where I was, I would say, in the Analyst Day or 3 months ago. And AI, we continue. We increased the number of POCs. I believe we will start to closing orders this quarter. And from there, hopefully, we'll see a strong ramp. It's earlier to talk about it versus API where we see the business right now.

Operator: Okay. We have no further questions. I'd like to hand the call back to Roy for closing remarks.

Roy Zisapel: Okay. Thank you, everyone, for joining us, and have a great day.

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This article is a transcript of this conference call produced for The Motley Fool. While we strive for our Foolish Best, there may be errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in this transcript. Parts of this article were created using Large Language Models (LLMs) based on The Motley Fool's insights and investing approach. It has been reviewed by our AI quality control systems. Since LLMs cannot (currently) own stocks, it has no positions in any of the stocks mentioned. As with all our articles, The Motley Fool does not assume any responsibility for your use of this content, and we strongly encourage you to do your own research, including listening to the call yourself and reading the company's SEC filings. Please see our Terms and Conditions for additional details, including our Obligatory Capitalized Disclaimers of Liability.

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