SentinelOne's Q2 2026 Earnings Call: Contradictions Uncovered in ARR, Revenue Growth, and Strategic Partnerships
The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call
Date of Call: August 28, 2025
Financials Results
- Revenue: $242M, up 22% YOY
- Gross Margin: 79%
- Operating Margin: 2%, improving by more than 500 bps YOY
Guidance:
- Q3 revenue expected ~$256M (+22% YOY)
- FY26 revenue outlook raised to $998M–$1.02B (~$1.0B midpoint; +22% YOY)
- Q3 gross margin ~78.5%
- FY26 gross margin 78.5%–79%
- Q3 operating margin ~4% (~+900 bps YOY)
- FY26 operating margin ~3% (~+600 bps YOY)
- Expect sustained quarterly operating profitability and first full year of operating profit in FY26
- FY26 free cash flow positive and a few points higher than operating margin
- Prompt Security deal to close in Q3; minimal FY26 revenue/ARR, ~80 bps FY26 operating margin headwind; FX headwinds included
Business Commentary:
- Revenue and ARR Growth:
- SentinelOne, Inc. reported a
24%year-on-year growth in total ARR, surpassing$1 billion, and achieved recordsecond quarter net new ARRwith over20%growth. The growth was driven by strong execution, business momentum, and rising demand for its AI-powered cybersecurity solutions, along with contributions from new customer acquisitions and existing customer expansions.
Platform Adoption and Innovation:
- Approximately
halfof the company's quarterly bookings came from non-endpoint solutions, highlighting the expanding value of its broader platform. The growth in platform solutions, including AI, data, and cloud solutions, was driven by strong adoption by new and existing customers, demonstrating the value and differentiation of the Singularity platform.
Strategic Acquisitions:
- SentinelOne acquired Prompt Security for
approximately $180 million, enhancing the Singularity platform's ability to secure generative AI in enterprises. The acquisition was driven by the urgent need to address the risks and exposures introduced by widespread GenAI adoption and the recognition of AI's transformative impact on cybersecurity.
Operating Leverage and Financial Performance:
- The company achieved an industry-leading gross margin of
79%and operating profitability of2%, with a net income margin increasing to5%in Q2. - The strong financial performance was a result of disciplined pricing strategies, healthy platform unit economics, and a focus on driving operating leverage alongside top-tier growth.
Sentiment Analysis:
- “Total ARR grew 24% and crossed $1 billion.” “We’re raising our full year revenue outlook.” “Revenue grew 22% year-over-year to $242 million.” “We maintained an industry-leading gross margin of 79%.” “We achieved operating profitability of 2%... operating margin improving by more than 500 basis points year-over-year.” “Fifth consecutive quarter of positive net income margin… 5% in Q2.”
Q&A:
- Question from John Stephen DiFucci (Guggenheim): Is the Singularity platform driving not just larger initial deals but also broader expansion within the base? Any metrics to illustrate this?
Response: Growth was broad-based with an even split between new logos and expansions; Purple AI and Data are fastest-growing, and FlexFLEX-- is enabling larger, multi-solution lands and expansions.
- Question from Robbie David Owens (Piper Sandler): Any guardrails for Q3 net new ARR given variability in large deals?
Response: They don’t guide ARR, but the updated revenue outlook implies an improved view of net new ARR for the full year.
- Question from Brad Alan Zelnick (Deutsche Bank): How new is Flex versus prior practices, and how do Flex deals flow through ARR and revenue?
Response: Flex is a new, flexible licensing model driving larger, multi-product deals (including an 8-figure win); financially, ARR is TCV divided by duration and revenue is recognized ratably.
- Question from Joseph Anthony Gallo (Jefferies): When does AI security translate into revenue, given Prompt's immaterial near-term ARR?
Response: GenAI usage is surging; Prompt addresses governance and DLP-like controls at the endpoint, expected to be a significant contributor over time.
- Question from Rudy Grayson Kessinger (D.A. Davidson): Why not raise revenue more after a very strong Q2?
Response: Second-half outlook improved, but guidance remains prudent due to macro, federal, and large-deal timing considerations.
- Question from Michael Joseph Cikos (Needham): What primarily drove the net new ARR upside this quarter?
Response: Upside was broad-based: strong expansions and new logos, triple-digit growth in Purple AI, record Data contribution, and larger deal sizes aided by Flex.
- Question from Brian Lee Essex (JPMorgan): How is the SIEM market evolving between stored/queryed data vs real-time streaming?
Response: Enterprises want control of data and real-time processing; machine-speed attacks require real-time ingestion/analytics, an area where SentinelOneS-- leads.
- Question from Ittai Kidron (Oppenheimer): Update on U.S. vs international mix and RPO duration?
Response: International was 38% of revenue (up Q/Q); RPO grew 26% with duration relatively stable.
- Question from Shaul Eyal (TD Cowen): Long-term revenue uplift potential from Flex and pipeline health?
Response: Early days, but Flex should boost deal sizes, duration, and platform adoption; pipeline is very healthy and growing.
- Question from Gabriela Borges (Goldman Sachs): Why be more prudent on the back-half guide versus 90 days ago despite ARR beat?
Response: They raised the second-half outlook but remain cautious due to macro, federal, and large-deal timing variability.

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