Adam Hejl
3 min read
What Happened?
Shares of cloud security and performance company Cloudflare (NYSE:NET) fell 5.8% in the afternoon session after a stronger-than-expected jobs report signaled that the Federal Reserve may keep interest rates higher for longer.
The U.S. economy added 172,000 nonfarm payroll jobs in May, significantly surpassing economists’ expectations of around 85,000, while the unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%. This robust labor market data eases concerns of an economic slowdown but diminishes the likelihood of near-term interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve. A prolonged high-interest-rate environment can create headwinds for growth-oriented sectors like technology, as it pressures stock valuations by making future earnings less valuable in the present. As a result, investors recalibrated their expectations for a ‘higher-for-longer’ rate scenario.
The stock market overreacts to news, and big price drops can present good opportunities to buy high-quality stocks. Is now the time to buy Cloudflare? Access our full analysis report here, it’s free.
What Is The Market Telling Us
Cloudflare’s shares are very volatile and have had 28 moves greater than 5% over the last year. In that context, today’s move indicates the market considers this news meaningful but not something that would fundamentally change its perception of the business.
The previous big move we wrote about was 4 days ago when the stock gained 11.1% on the news that it extended its recovery, continuing a rebound from the selloff on May 7 (when it reported earnings) that was, in hindsight, a partial market misread.
The Q1 2026 results were strong: revenue of $639.8 million, up 34% year-over-year, against a $628 million consensus, with adjusted EPS of $0.25 beating the $0.23 estimate. NET recovered approximately 8% the previous week during the SNOW-driven software rally and added further ground during the session.
The day’s catalyst was Nvidia’s Computex keynote confirming that the agentic AI era is arriving in fall 2026 with RTX Spark PC devices and Vera Rubin data center chips already in full production, precisely the infrastructure layer Cloudflare’s restructuring was built to sit on top of. The previous partnership with Anthropic to launch “Cloudflare Environments for Claude Managed Agents,” providing secure sandboxes for autonomous agents on Cloudflare’s network, gives the thesis a concrete near-term anchor. CEO Matthew Prince called AI “the biggest tailwind we’ve ever seen in Cloudflare’s history.”.