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Cloudflare, Inc. (NET)

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83.43 +1.22 (+1.48%)
At close: 4:00 PM EDT
83.84 +0.41 (+0.49%)
After hours: 7:36 PM EDT
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DELL
  • Previous Close 82.21
  • Open 81.69
  • Bid 83.15 x 1300
  • Ask 83.90 x 1100
  • Day's Range 81.64 - 84.66
  • 52 Week Range 53.88 - 116.00
  • Volume 2,366,431
  • Avg. Volume 3,388,926
  • Market Cap (intraday) 28.349B
  • Beta (5Y Monthly) 1.10
  • PE Ratio (TTM) --
  • EPS (TTM) -0.53
  • Earnings Date Aug 1, 2024
  • Forward Dividend & Yield --
  • Ex-Dividend Date --
  • 1y Target Est 90.52

Cloudflare, Inc. operates as a cloud services provider that delivers a range of services to businesses worldwide. The company provides an integrated cloud-based security solution to secure a range of combination of platforms, including public cloud, private cloud, on-premise, software-as-a-service applications, and IoT devices; and website and application security products comprising web application firewall, bot management, distributed denial of service, API gateways, SSL/TLS encryption, script management, security center, and rate limiting products. It offers website and application performance solutions, including content delivery, load balancing, DNS, agro smart routing, video stream delivery, web optimization, cache reserve, cloudfare waiting room, and cloudfare data localization suite; SASE platform through cloudfare one that provides a cloud-based network-as-a-service; network services which deliver network connectivity, security, and performance, including magic WAN, magic transit, magic firewall, cloudflare network interconnect, and spectrum. In addition, the company provides zero trust services, such as cloudflare access, cloudflare gateway, remote browser isolation, cloud access security broker, cloud email security, and data loss prevention products that protects, inspects, and provides privilege rules to grant access to data and application. Further, it provides developer-based solutions consisting of cloudflare workers, R2 object storage, workers KV, durable objects, cloudfare pages, cloudfare stream, and cloudfare images; and consumer products comprising of 1.1.1.1, a DNS resolver, WARP, a virtual private network, and cloudfare registrar that secures registration and management of domain names. The company serves customers in the technology, healthcare, financial services, consumer and retail, industrial, and non-profit industries, as well as government. Cloudflare, Inc. was incorporated in 2009 and is headquartered in San Francisco, California.

www.cloudflare.com

3,704

Full Time Employees

December 31

Fiscal Year Ends

Recent News: NET

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Performance Overview: NET

Trailing total returns as of 7/15/2024, which may include dividends or other distributions. Benchmark is

.

YTD Return

NET
0.20%
S&P 500
18.06%

1-Year Return

NET
25.38%
S&P 500
24.99%

3-Year Return

NET
20.07%
S&P 500
28.73%

5-Year Return

NET
363.50%
S&P 500
87.25%

Compare To: NET

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Statistics: NET

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Valuation Measures

Annual
As of 7/12/2024
  • Market Cap

    27.93B

  • Enterprise Value

    27.65B

  • Trailing P/E

    --

  • Forward P/E

    129.87

  • PEG Ratio (5yr expected)

    --

  • Price/Sales (ttm)

    19.92

  • Price/Book (mrq)

    35.04

  • Enterprise Value/Revenue

    19.96

  • Enterprise Value/EBITDA

    --

Financial Highlights

Profitability and Income Statement

  • Profit Margin

    -13.10%

  • Return on Assets (ttm)

    -4.41%

  • Return on Equity (ttm)

    -25.02%

  • Revenue (ttm)

    1.39B

  • Net Income Avi to Common (ttm)

    -181.41M

  • Diluted EPS (ttm)

    -0.53

Balance Sheet and Cash Flow

  • Total Cash (mrq)

    1.72B

  • Total Debt/Equity (mrq)

    180.21%

  • Levered Free Cash Flow (ttm)

    280.46M

Research Analysis: NET

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Analyst Price Targets

50.00 Low
90.52 Average
83.43 Current
135.00 High
 

Analyst Recommendations

  • Strong Buy
  • Buy
  • Hold
  • Underperform
  • Sell
 

Earnings

Consensus EPS
 

Company Insights: NET

Research Reports: NET

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  • 2024 Investor Day take away

    Cloudflare provides cloud-based network services that protect internet apps and help them to run faster -- without requiring clients to add hardware, install new software, or change code. Cloudflare's unified control plane across on-premise, cloud, hybrid, and SaaS data infrastructure environments ensures the security, reliability, and performance of its enterprise customers' external data infrastructure (websites, applications, and application program interfaces); internal networks and devices (identity and access); DevOps; and consumer applications. Internet sites powered by Cloudflare have all web traffic routed through its intelligent global network. The company seeks to relieve clients of the cost and complexity of managing their own network hardware. Some 48% of the company's revenue is generated outside of the U.S. Cloudflare was founded in 2010 and went public on September 12, 2019, at $15 per share.

    Rating
    Price Target
     
  • Halfway Home and in the Win Column: Our Monthly Survey of the Economy,

    Halfway Home and in the Win Column: Our Monthly Survey of the Economy, Interest Rates, and Stocks The stock market is broadly higher as of mid-year. Some of the gain, particularly in top-performing sectors, relates to AI mania. Gains across the rest of the market, we believe, reflect increasing investor optimism that the Federal Reserve will finally pivot to accommodative monetary policy and enact one or more rate cuts by year-end 2024. Following slow and steady gains early in 2024, stocks were pressured in April by rising rates that hit levels last seen in October 2023. Stocks then rallied across May and June, as FOMO fever drove participation and investors anticipated lower rates. Stocks in 2024 have so far superseded the usual election-year jinx. The election is heating up, representing a challenge for the second half. AI continues to lead the market. We would like to see investors take profits in AI names, reallocate winnings, and enable improvement in sector breadth. That would be a highly encouraging sign as the traditionally slower summer months progress. The Economy, Interest Rates, and Earnings The third and final report of first-quarter GDP signaled cooling in the U.S. economy, particularly among consumers. While the consensus expects somewhat better growth in the second quarter, weakness in first-quarter GDP is a real concern and will be even more worrisome if it carries into 2Q24 and the second half. The final first-quarter 2024 GDP report showed growth of 1.4%, down from 3.4% growth in 4Q23. Ahead of the advance report release, the consensus call was for 2.4% growth in the first quarter. The increase in first-quarter 2024 GDP primarily reflected increases in personal consumption expenditures, residential and non-residential fixed investment, and state and local government spending. These gains were partly offset by a decline in private inventory investment, a category whose volatility has tracked the enormous swings in the domestic and global supply chains across 2021-24. Imports increased though not as much as initially reported; imports are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP. Personal consumption expenditures for 1Q24 increased 1.5%, down from 3.3% for 4Q23 and 2.2% for all of 2023. Spending on goods fell 2.3% in 1Q24, after rising 3.0% in 4Q23 and 2.0% for all of 2023. Durable goods spending fell a sharp 4.5% in 1Q24, much worse than the 1.9% decline initially reported; this category was up a robust 4.2 % for all of 2023. Non-durable goods spending for 1Q24 fell 1.1%. Following holiday strength in 4Q23, consumers pulled back sharply on goods spending in 1Q24 amid the withering effects of multi-year inflation. Consumer spending on services grew 3.3% in 1Q24, about in line with 4Q23 spending levels. Some of the growth in consumer services spending is driven by rent equivalent and insurance, two costs consumers cannot control and many cannot avoid. Without the rise in servicer spending, overall PCE would have been negative. The GDP report provided further evidence of the consumer under siege from multiple years of inflation. According to the Commerce Department, retail spending remains positive on an annual basis, but is growing much less than in 2023. We expect PCE within the GDP accounts to continue to send conflicting signals, with overall goods spending remaining under pressure. Non-residential fixed investment, the proxy for corporate capital spending, rose at a 4.4% annual rate in 1Q24, after rising 3.7% in 4Q23. Intellectual Property grew in high-single-digit percentages, while spending on Structures and Equipment was up in low-single digits. At least some of the growth in capital spending in the first quarter was the result of corporations facing higher costs for everything. PCE and non-residential fixed investment represent about four-fifths of gross domestic product in any quarter. In 1Q24, consumer spending added about one percentage point to GDP, while non-residential fixed investment added 0.6%. Residential fixed investment surprised with 16.0% growth in 1Q24, up from 2.8% growth in 4Q23. Although housing data in 2024 to date has been soft, Millennial demand for housing continues to intensify. With aging Baby Boomers locked into too-large homes by low mortgage rates, Millennials are turning to the new home market. An outlier data point in 1Q24 GDP was the export-import balance, which heavily favored imports. Exports grew 1.6% in 1Q24, while imports were up 6.1%. Given the higher dollar value of imports, the net exports-imports balance subtracted about two-thirds of a percentage point (65 bps) from overall 1Q24 GDP growth. We expect this category to remain volatile quarter over quarter, but we also look for exports to rebound amid global demand for U.S. technology products including AI gear. Another outlier, though less significant, was the change in private inventories. This category subtracted 42 bps from 1Q24 GDP growth, after reducing 4Q23 GDP by nearly half a percentage point. We look for private inventories to maintain the excessive volatility in this series that has prevailed since the pandemic. Overall government spending was up 1.8% and added one-third of a percentage point to overall growth. Federal spending declined 0.2%, while state and local government spending grew 3.0%. The price index for gross domestic purchases increased 3.1% in 1Q24, compared with an increase of 1.9% in 4Q23. And the PCE price index jumped to 3.4%, up from 1.8%, while the core PCE index reached 3.7% in 1Q24 from 2.0% in 4Q23. Outside the GDP accounts, indicators generally suggest deceleration, although growth continues at a subdued level. The consumer economy continues to send mixed signals, with sentiment in the tank and retail spending weak - yet jobs and wages still growing. The U.S. economy shocked with 272,000 new payroll jobs in May, well above the consensus call of 185,000. May's increase in payrolls and revisions in March and April combined took the three-month average to 249,000, above the 12-month average of 232,000. The unemployment rate rose to 4.0% for May from 3.9% for April, in line with the level the Fed would prefer to see before beginning its rate-cutting campaign. Average hourly earnings increased 14 cents month-to-month for April and were 4.1% higher year-over-year. May annual wage growth rebounded from 3.9% for April, which represented the first sub-4% growth since June 2021. Annual wage growth continues to run above inflation, but the premium has narrowed. Retail sales in May were tepid for the second straight month. Retail sales for April, originally reported as unchanged from March levels, were revised to down 0.2% month over month. Economists expected a 0.3% recovery in May from weak April levels; instead, retail sales edged up just 0.1%. On a year-over-year basis, retail sales were up 2.3%; that is down from consistent mid- to high-single-digit annual growth across 2023. By contrast, industrial production showed recovery strength in May. Industrial production rose 0.9% month over month, much better than the 0.3% consensus forecast and up from 0.0% in April. Manufacturing output rebounded to 0.9% growth after declining 0.3% in April. And May Capacity Utilization was 78.7%, still below the long-run average but up half a point from April. Offsetting weakness in mining output, utility output should keep overall industrial production strong through the hot summer months. Straddling the commercial and consumer economies is housing. Notwithstanding the (possibly misleading) residential fixed investment data from 1Q24 GDP, the housing economy continues to struggle. Based on SAAR (seasonally adjusted annual rate), existing and new home sales are currently running at less than two-thirds of peak levels achieved in the immediate post-pandemic period. Existing home sales, which reached a peak SAAR of 6.6 million in January 2021, fell to a SAAR of 4.11 million for May 2024. New home sales, which reached a peak SAAR of 1.03 million in October 2020, dropped to 634,000 as of April 2024 - also running at 62% of peak levels. The upside of the depressed housing economy had been that consumers were spending elsewhere in the U.S. economy. Multi-month weakness in retail sales suggests that consumers are strained even without the costs accompanying home ownership. Given the realities in the present environment, Director of Economic Research Chris Graja, CFA, lowered the Argus forecast for 2024 GDP growth to 1.7%, from a prior 2.0%. Looking at the cadence for the year ahead, Chris expects quarterly GDP to grow in the sub-2% range across the first three quarters. Argus is then modeling 2.0% growth for 4Q24 as the first rate cuts lift spirits. Our expectations for 2025 GDP growth are in the 2% range. Given the overhang of high prices and interest rates, and with the consumer weary from years of inflation, our GDP growth forecasts for 2024 and 2025 are likely to remain volatile. We also continue to believe the U.S. economy can avoid recession in 2024, as it did in 2023 and 2022. The central bank started its rate-hiking campaign in March 2022 well behind the inflation curve. More than five percentage points later, the Fed halted in July 2023. At its mid-June FOMC meeting, the Fed voted to hold the fed funds rate steady at the 5.25%-5.50% tendency, as it has done for seven straight meetings since July 2023. In May, the FOMC statement noted 'a lack of further progress toward the Committee's 2 percent inflation objective.' The language in the June FOMC report, by contrast, noted 'modest further progress toward the Committee's 2 percent inflation objective.' On the downside, the Fed issued a new dot-plot that appeared to signal the likelihood of just one rate cut in 2024. Minutes from the June FOMC meeting sent a mixed message. The Fed's preferred inflation gauge, the core PCE price index, rose 0.1% in May and was up 2.6% year over year. That was the lowest annual rate of change since March 2021, which was also the first time in the current economic cycle that inflation topped the Fed's 2% target. The core PCE data confirmed inflation inputs from May CPI and PPI reported earlier in June. The May all-items CPI was unchanged on a month-over-month basis from April; on an annual basis, May all-items CPI at 3.3% was 0.1% better than expected. On a month-over-month basis, May core CPI was up 0.2%, the lowest level since June 2023. The annual change in core CPI was 3.4%, beating both the 3.5% consensus call and the 3.6% level from April. The producer price index also contained good news from further up the pricing pipeline. The all-items PPI unexpectedly fell 0.2% from April levels, much better than expectations for a 0.1% increase. The year-over-year change in all-items PPI was 2.2%, again much better than the 2.5% consensus. Excluding food & energy, the monthly change in PPI was 0.0% (vs. 0.3% consensus); and the annual change was 2.3% (vs. 2.4% consensus). Goods inflation has come off markedly, reflecting strained finances particularly for middle-income to lower-tier consumers. Everyone is being hit by still-high inflation in services categories such as car insurance - unavoidable for most people trying to get to work. Shelter costs are also persistently running ahead of the general inflation trend, rising 5.4% annually in the May CPI. If you take the current annual change in CPI and subtract the shelter component, the current inflation rate would be right at the Fed's 2% target. Overall improvement in inflation is allowing market rates of interest to move down from spring peaks, even though they remain above optimistically low levels at the beginning of 2024. The 10-year Treasury yield was 4.29% at the end of June, down from 4.41% at the end of May and peak levels of 4.63% as of the end of April. The two-year Treasury yield was 4.70% as of the end of June, down 4.82% at the end of May and the peak level of 4.96% as of the end of April. The two-year Treasury yield has maintained its 40-basis-point (bps) premium to the 10-year yield. Our forecasts now call for twos-10s inversion to end in the first quarter of 2025 as the Fed implements its first rate cut; we had previously expected twos-10s inversion to end during 2024. Despite the Fed shifting from two projected cuts to possibly just one, Argus Fixed Income Strategist Kevin Heal continues to model two quarter-point rate cuts in 2024: once at the September meeting prior to the election, and again at the December meeting post-election. Each cut is expected to be 25 basis points, bringing the Fed's central tendency to the 4.75%-5.00% level by year-end. As of the final trading day of June 2024, the CME Fed Watch tool shows a 60% probability of the Fed cutting the fed funds rate by 25 bps at the September FOMC meeting. By the December FOMC meeting, the Fed Watch Tool shows just a 5% probability that the fed funds rate will not be cut at all in 2024. Despite packing in two rate cuts in the final four months of 2024, the Fed is expected to proceed cautiously next year, according to Kevin Heal, with just two additional quarter-point rate cuts in 2025. Since the early part of 2023, the three Es - employment, economy, and earnings - have all been rising, superseding concerns about the two Is - inflation and interest rates. First-quarter 2024 earnings outpaced expectations, but continue to run below the double-digit growth that prevailed in the pandemic and immediate post-pandemic era. First-quarter 2024 S&P 500 earnings from continuing operations rose in mid- to high-single-digit percentages, according to our vendor survey. FactSet calculates that 1Q24 EPS were up 7%; and Refinitiv calculates 11% EPS growth. Bloomberg's estimate was for 8% growth. Just over four-fifths of S&P 500 component companies exceeded 1Q24 earnings expectations. That is better than the five-year trend of 77% and the 10-year trend of 74% beating expectations. The magnitude of the beat is also above expectations. On average, companies reporting positive earnings growth have topped the 1Q EPS consensus by 8%; that is toward the top of the 5%-8% range of the past 10 years. The best earnings sectors for 1Q24 earnings season were in Communication Services, Information Technology, Utilities, and Financials; all rose in double-digits year over year. Utilities 1Q24 growth reflects an easy comparison against 1Q23, which was unseasonably warm. Sectors with moderate growth include Consumer Staples, Industrials and Consumer Discretionary. Sectors that have posted negative quarterly comparisons in 1Q EPS season include Materials, Energy, and Healthcare. We look for the Healthcare sector to snap back to growth in the remaining quarters of 2024. Based on the low level of earnings warnings from most parts of the economy, some estimate compilers are now looking for low-double-digit EPS growth in 2Q24. Yet recent earnings reports from companies exposed to the consumer retail economy have been disappointing; these include reports from Target, Nike, Levi Strauss, and others. Given that caution, Argus continues to model high-single-digit EPS growth for 2Q24. Argus then looks for low-double-digit earnings growth in 3Q24 and 4Q24. Overall, we look for high-single-digit EPS growth for both 2024 and 2025. This pace of EPS growth is built into our valuation model for the S&P 500. According to Argus President John Eade, our stock-bond barometer is near equilibrium. Given declining inflation growth and interest rates along with our forecast for high-single-digit EPS growth for 2024 and 2025, the total-return outlook for the S&P 500 is better than it has been since pre-pandemic days. A key risk to valuations would be earnings growth failing to meet the market's targets and/or inflation or interest rates ticking higher. Any of those factors would result in elevated valuations and increase the risk of a selloff. Domestic and Global Markets Growth stocks sectors began to pull away from the broad market in May and extended that leadership in June. Wilshire Large Cap Growth is up about 24% in 2024, leading all indexes as investors continue to seek ways to play AI. The growth-heavy Nasdaq extended its advantage over the S&P 500, rising 18.6% as of mid-year. That put it more than three points ahead of the 15.3% year-to-date gain for the S&P 500. In the clearest sign of leadership change, Wilshire Large Cap Value lost ground in a rising market during June. Large-cap value was up 7.2% at mid-year, after being up 7.8% at the end of May. The equity market still shows signs of diversification, but breadth could be at risk in the second half. With investors focused on the giants, small-caps continue to underperform. The Russell 2000 was up less than 2% as of mid-year 2024. The DJIA is also lagging while rising just under 5% for the year. IPO prices are not exploding higher; M&A prices are relatively well-behaved; and the Nasdaq has not doubled in price over the past year. Any and all of those indicators would be a sign that the stock market might be topping out. In their absence, and with very few investors 'underwater' at this point, the current rally leg in stocks should have more room to run. Halfway through 2024, sector breadth has deteriorated somewhat from strong levels earlier in the year but remains better than that at mid-year 2023. Communication Services and Information Technology at mid-year 2023 were high-teen percentage points higher than the benchmark index; at present, they are on average beating the broad market by high-single to low-double-digit percentages. While only these two sectors are ahead of the S&P 500, multiple sectors - including Energy, Financials, Utilities, Consumer Staples, and Healthcare - are currently beating or slightly lagging the index's average annual appreciation of 10% since 1980. Materials and Consumer Discretionary are up 4%-6% year to date, while Real Estate - deeply negative for much of 2024 - is down less than 2% as of mid-year. The Consumer Discretionary sector, one of the top three performers in 2023, was ninth among 11 sectors in 2024 to date. Spending by consumers, particularly those in the middle and lower tiers of the economy, is being constrained by high interest rates, high costs for everyday goods, the burden of high rents. The reality of weak consumer goods spending was evident in the 1Q24 GDP report as well as in April and May retail spending. The spending disconnect between the generally older top of the economy and the generally younger middle and bottom of the economy appears to be growing. In setting policy, the Fed is presumed to focus exclusively on the numbers, i.e., achieving its 2% inflation target. However, we believe these pressures on the middle class and lower tiers of the economy will figure in the Fed's rate policy decision-making. Sector weights as of the end of 1Q24 were meaningfully changed from one year earlier, when the shift from cyclical and defensive sectors into growth sectors was just getting underway. April had a modest impact on the overall trend. May and June represented a shift back to growth, as Nvidia's earnings again inflamed AI fever. June ended with the Information Technology sector representing a highest-ever 32.4% weighting within the S&P 500. Seven sectors shrank in June in order to provide additional weight to IT, while two were unchanged and one (Communication Services) edged higher by 0.1%. We adjusted our recommended sector allocations, as we do each quarter at the beginning of March, June, September, and December. The following reflects our guidance for the calendar third quarter of 2024. Although we use a quantitative, six-part, 'blind' sector model, our sector recommendations tend to align with qualitative and fundamental dynamics in the market outlook. We have raised the Energy sector to recommended Market-Weight from recommended Under-Weight. Energy demand appears to have stabilized, as initial consumer euphoria over EVs has cooled, and global economic recovery has put petroleum supply and demand into relative balance. Our recommended sector weightings are as follows: -- Over-Weight: Financials, Technology, Healthcare, and Communication Services. -- Market Weight: Consumer Discretionary, Utilities, Industrials, Energy, and Real Estate. -- Under-Weight: Consumer Staples and Materials. Like the U.S. market, global stocks did better in 2023 than they did in 2022; and most carried that momentum into mid-year 2024. Compared to 2023, we continue to some changes in international stock-market leadership in 2024. China had a huge upside reversal in April and remained positive as of the end of June. That has impacted theme performance around the globe. On average, our composite of global bourses is up about 7% year-to-date in 2024, after rising about 10% in the first half of 2023. Japan (up 19%) remains in front year to date. Next is the U.S. (up 15%) and the Eurozone (up 11%). Brazil and now Mexico (both down about 7%) are the only negative international bourses. In terms of our themes, mature economies are in front in 2024 with a 13% gain; this theme also won 2023 with a 22% gain. Asian markets are up 11%, as rising India and Japan are joined by China. Americas markets (including U.S., Brazil, Mexico and Canada) are up 2% in 2024 after rising 20% in 2023. BRICs-minus-Russia is up 2% in 2024 after also lagging in 2023. Resources economies (down 3%) have not lived up to last year's 18% gain. Conclusion Market strength through mid-year is a positive indicator for the full year. Since 1980, the S&P 500 has appreciated in double-digits as of the end of June a total of 16 times. Eleven of those 16 double-digit mid-year gains were concentrated in the years prior to the millennial turn, including six times in the 1983-89 period. Also since 1980, the S&P 500 has never been up in double-digit percentages as of end-of-June in a presidential election year. Accordingly, 2024 now represents the first double-digit mid-year gain in any presidential election year since 1980. That said, a double-digit win as of mid-year has predicted a much better-than-average full-year gain for stocks. From 1980 through 2023, the S&P 500 averaged an annual capital gain of 10.0%. For the 16 years between 1980 and 2023 in which the S&P 500 has been up more than 10% at mid-year, the average gain as of June 30 has been 15.8%. And for those same 16 years, the average full-year gain has been 23.3%, or more than twice the market's 10% average gain.

     
  • Strong 1Q and increased guidance

    Cloudflare provides cloud-based network services that protect internet apps and help them to run faster -- without requiring clients to add hardware, install new software, or change code. Cloudflare's unified control plane across on-premise, cloud, hybrid, and SaaS data infrastructure environments ensures the security, reliability, and performance of its enterprise customers' external data infrastructure (websites, applications, and application program interfaces); internal networks and devices (identity and access); DevOps; and consumer applications. Internet sites powered by Cloudflare have all web traffic routed through its intelligent global network. The company seeks to relieve clients of the cost and complexity of managing their own network hardware. Some 48% of the company's revenue is generated outside of the U.S. Cloudflare was founded in 2010 and went public on September 12, 2019, at $15 per share.

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  • Stocks rose convincingly on Thursday as hopes are growing that the Fed will

    Stocks rose convincingly on Thursday as hopes are growing that the Fed will cut interest rates sooner than later. The DJIA had its seventh consecutive day in the green (up 0.85%), the Nasdaq Composite was higher by 0.27%, and the S&P 500 popped by 0.51%. Stocks have now reclaimed losses booked in April.

     

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