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3 Cybersecurity Stocks Where Insiders Are Making Big Moves
Reported by Leo Miller. Article Published: 4/1/2026.
Key Points
- Palo Alto Networks' CEO purchased nearly $10 million in company stock amid a sharp sell-off, boosting his direct ownership by roughly 25%.
- Insider sales at CrowdStrike and Rubrik were tied to tax obligations on vesting RSUs and predetermined trading plans—not bearish bets.
- Only a small fraction of companies have ramped up cyber spending to address AI-driven threats, even as AI adoption widens the attack surface.
- Special Report: Elon Musk's $1 Quadrillion AI IPO
Along with many other parts of the market, cybersecurity stocks have taken a big tumble in recent months. This includes companies like Palo Alto Networks (NASDAQ: PANW) and CrowdStrike (NASDAQ: CRWD). Both of these stalwarts are down more than 15% in 2026 and roughly 30% from their 52-week highs. Even larger declines are being seen at smaller players like Rubrik (NYSE: RBRK), with shares off about 50% in 2026.
Much of the weakness stems from concerns roiling the broader software industry: disruption from artificial intelligence (AI). Some argue AI tools can find and repair vulnerabilities more effectively than traditional cybersecurity platforms. But markets may be underestimating the new risks AI adoption can create.
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Click here to see the full storyBoston Consulting Group (BCG), a leading consulting firm, notes that AI systems embedded in organizations are themselves becoming targets that bad actors can exploit. At the same time, only 5% of companies have increased cyber spending to combat AI threats, and 70% of organizations struggle to attract talent able to handle these risks. This supports the view that cybersecurity could become more important, not less.
Insider trading activity across cybersecurity stocks paints an interesting picture for investors amid this sell-off.
PANW CEO Ups Stake Big-Time as Shares Tank
In late March, Palo Alto Networks CEO Nikesh Arora purchased just under $10 million worth of company stock at an average price near $147. The stock rallied the next trading day by about 5% as investors reacted to the bullish signal.
Given the stock's decline, Arora evidently bought the dip. Despite market pressure, Palo Alto has continued to deliver solid financial results: it reported revenues at or above expectations in each of its last four earnings reports and has posted significant beats on adjusted earnings per share.
Palo Alto's last 12-month revenue growth was roughly 15%–16%, a moderate acceleration from about 14% growth over the comparable 12-month period in 2025. The company's operating margin rose 190 basis points in its latest quarter to 30.3%.
Palo Alto has pushed back on AI-disruption fears. In its most recent earnings call, Arora said he was “confused why the market is treating AI as a threat.”
He added, “As enterprises start putting more critical functionality in the hands of AI, they will want control of AI agents or of their AI infrastructure, and that requires more security. So, I think generally it's a positive trend towards more security adoption.”
Those comments help explain Arora's sizable purchase, which increased his direct ownership in PANW by nearly 25%, and they align with BCG's research implications.
CRWD and RBRK Sales: Red Flags or Business as Usual?
By contrast, recent insider selling at CrowdStrike and Rubrik might alarm some investors. In March, CrowdStrike executives from CEO George Kurtz to President Michael Sentonas sold a combined $28.1 million of CRWD shares. Rubrik insiders, including director John Thompson and CFO Choudary Kiran Kumar, sold about $6.6 million of stock.
At first glance, those moves could seem to contradict the bullish signal from Palo Alto. But the sales were largely mitigated by circumstances that suggest routine activity rather than a negative outlook. Thompson's transactions, for example, were executed under a predetermined 10b5-1 plan, which means they were planned well in advance and were likely driven by liquidity planning rather than a lack of confidence in RBRK.
Most other sales across both companies were similarly procedural, according to filings. Each CRWD filing from March includes this note: “All reported sales were made to cover tax withholdings due on vesting of restricted stock unit (RSUs) awards, as required under the Issuer's administrative policies.” A RBRK filing from Choudary Kiran Kumar contains a similar statement.
Insiders had to make these sales to pay tax obligations incurred when RSUs vested, which is treated as income. As a result, those transactions do not necessarily signal bearish views on either stock.
Bullish Insider Buys Still Require Patience
Overall, the PANW purchase by its CEO is a clear bullish endorsement for that stock and, given industry-wide weakness, a cautiously positive signal for the sector. The sales at CRWD and RBRK, however, appear to be routine or tax-driven and do not materially offset the bullish implication from Arora's buy.
It's important to remember that insider purchases do not always produce immediate market reversals. For example, Nike's (NYSE: NKE) CEO bought $1 million worth of shares near $61 at the end of 2025; despite an initial spike, NKE has since fallen below $55.
D-Wave Quantum Has Been Cut in Half—Can a Leveraged ETF Help Bulls?
Written by Nathan Reiff. Publication Date: 3/31/2026.
Key Points
- Quantum computing firm D-Wave Quantum has shed more than 50% of its share price so far in 2026 amid a selloff after a sustained rally last year.
- At the same time, QBTX is a single-stock ETF aiming to provide 2X leveraged exposure to the daily share price movement of QBTS.
- QBTX may be more appropriate for risk-tolerant investors expecting a single-day bump in D-Wave stock, while QBTS could be more suitable for those expecting the company to reverse its selloff and continue to make a significant impact on the quantum computing industry over a longer period.
- Special Report: Elon Musk's $1 Quadrillion AI IPO
Quantum computing firm D-Wave Quantum Inc. (NYSE: QBTS) has broken through the 50% threshold—meaning its shares have lost more than half of their value year-to-date (YTD) in 2026—leaving investors wondering how much lower they might fall. Indeed, the last time QBTS stock traded below $14 per share was in May 2025, after which shares surged to more than triple that level by October.
Despite the many reasons for concern about the company's selloff, a lower share price for D-Wave carries one potential advantage: any future dollar gain would translate into a larger percentage increase than the same dollar gain at a higher share price.
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Click here to see the full storyPut differently, if QBTS is trading at $14 and rises by $1, that represents a larger percentage gain than if it is trading at $30 and rises by the same $1. That dynamic is where the Tradr 2X Long QBTS Daily ETF (BATS: QBTX) could come into play.
What QBTX Offers and Why Its Appeal Is Different From QBTS
QBTX is one of a growing number of single-stock exchange-traded funds (ETFs) designed to provide leveraged exposure to a single underlying stock. Most ETFs hold a diversified basket of securities; single-stock funds like QBTX take the opposite approach, sacrificing diversification to magnify the daily returns of one name.
Specifically, QBTX seeks to deliver 2X long exposure to the daily return of D-Wave. If D-Wave stock rises 5% in a single day, QBTX is structured to attempt to rise about 10%. Conversely, on down days QBTX will roughly double the declines of QBTS.
Because of that daily leverage, investors should view D-Wave and QBTX as very different investment plays despite the similarities. QBTS may appeal to quantum-computing bulls who are willing to hold shares for months or years as the company grows revenue and works toward profitability. QBTX is more of a tactical vehicle for active traders seeking to profit from short-term moves—such as a strong earnings report or another timely catalyst.
It Comes Down to Risk Tolerance and Time Horizon
D-Wave faces clear near-term pressures, including earnings misses for Q4 2025 and the expectation of uneven revenue as the company increases spending to expand its reach. That comes on top of an already speculative industry backdrop.
Still, analysts across Wall Street remain largely optimistic about D-Wave's longer-term prospects, and the consensus price target sits above $36 per share. That suggests D-Wave may suit investors with at least a moderate risk tolerance and a medium-to-long investment horizon.
By contrast, QBTX's daily 2X leverage on an already speculative stock makes it appropriate only for sophisticated investors with a much higher risk tolerance. Because the leverage resets each trading day, QBTX is best used for very short-term trades; holding it over longer periods can result in compounding erosion as its performance deviates from QBTS.
So when is QBTX a sensible play for QBTS bulls? It can be useful when an investor is confident in a short-term directional trade driven by a specific catalyst—say, the announcement of a new Advantage2 quantum system sale or a major government contract. It can also amplify gains on an existing D-Wave position during periods of sustained upward momentum. In all cases, QBTX positions are generally closed before the market close each day to avoid accumulating additional compounding risk.
Investors who are broadly convinced of the transformative potential of quantum computing but reluctant to bet on a single company may prefer alternatives. A growing number of quantum-focused ETFs now offer greater diversification without the leverage risk, providing a middle ground for those not willing to concentrate their exposure in one stock.
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