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WS Investor 08 May 2026, 06:46
Cloudflare Sinks 16% After Hours as Mass Layoffs and Soft Q2 Guide Rattle Investors

San Francisco, May 7, 2026 — Shares in Cloudflare plunged around 16% in after-hours trading yesterday after the connectivity cloud company delivered a strong first quarter beat but simultaneously announced it is cutting approximately 1,100 employees — roughly 20% of its entire workforce — as part of a sweeping shift to what management is calling an "agentic AI-first operating model."

The Q1 numbers were genuinely impressive. Revenue grew 34% year-over-year to $639.8 million, beating analyst estimates of around $622 million by a comfortable margin. Adjusted EPS of $0.25 beat expectations of $0.23. Free cash flow rose to $84 million, or 13% of revenue. Full-year guidance was raised, with revenue now expected at $2.805 to $2.813 billion — above prior estimates — and adjusted EPS of $1.19 to $1.20, well ahead of the $1.14 consensus.

Yet none of that was enough to offset the shock of the layoff announcement. CEO Matthew Prince and COO Michelle Zatlyn announced the cuts in a letter to staff, framing them as a necessary transformation as AI agents increasingly take over work previously done by humans. The restructuring is expected to cost $140 to $150 million, with the bulk hitting Q2 earnings. Cloudflare, which had been aggressively hiring, joins a growing list of technology companies including Oracle, Meta, and Atlassian in using AI-driven efficiency as justification for significant headcount reductions.

Adding fuel to the selloff, Q2 revenue guidance of $664 to $665 million came in just below the analyst consensus of $665.3 million — a small miss in absolute terms but enough to amplify negative sentiment on a night already dominated by the layoff news. Valuation concerns also linger, with the stock having traded at a significant premium ahead of the report.

The irony is stark: Cloudflare is cutting jobs because AI is making its workforce more productive, while simultaneously telling investors that AI is the biggest tailwind in the company's history. The market, at least tonight, is focused on the human cost and the near-term uncertainty rather than the long-term opportunity.

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