December 28, 2024
Palo Alto Networks is buying security assets from IBM to expand customer base
Palo Alto Networks is buying IBM's QRadar as part of a bigger partnership between the two companies.

Nikesh Arora CEO & Chairman Palo Alto Networks, speaking on CNBC’s Squawk Box at the WEF Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland on Jan. 16th, 2024.

Adam Galici | CNBC

Palo Alto Networks is buying cloud security software assets from IBM as part of a broader partnership that will give the cybersecurity company access to more consultants and a bigger customer base.

In a joint press release on Tuesday, the companies said Palo Alto is acquiring IBM’s QRadar cloud software for an undisclosed sum and migrating existing customers to its security platform, Cortex Xsiam. IBM will train over 1,000 of its consulting employees on Palo Alto’s products.

Consolidation has been ramping up in the security software industry as companies gear up for a swarm of attacks spawned by artificial intelligence. In March, Cisco closed its $28 billion acquisition of Splunk, the networking company’s largest deal ever, snapping up the leading provider of security information and event management (SIEM) software.

Earlier on Wednesday, two other companies in the SIEM market, Exabeam and Thoma Bravo’s LogRhythm, announced plans to merge.

Nikesh Arora, Palo Alto’s CEO, told CNBC that his company needs to be better prepared to go up against Splunk.

“Clearly, it’s just a hotbed of activity in the consolidation in cybersecurity,” Arora said.

Palo Alto and IBM have been working more closely together for months, and Arora said he’d been talking with IBM CEO Arvind Krishna about how to advance their partnership. But they both sold SIEM software.

“We used to get stuck there,” Arora said.

In December, IBM said its consulting group would offer Palo Alto’s competing Cortex Xsiam software to customers. IBM will now adopt Cortex Xsiam, as well as Palo Alto’s Prisma Sase 3.0 product bundle. Palo Alto will incorporate IBM’s Watsonx large language models into Cortex Xsiam, in addition to its use of models from Google.

The SIEM category has been around for over 20 years, but Palo Alto just introduced Cortex Xsiam two years ago. It’s rapidly gained adoption, with over $90 million in bookings in the latest quarter, and Arora said the company has been taking market share from “everyone.”

For IBM, a more robust lineup of contemporary security tools for consulting might help the company deliver on its stated goal of revenue growth in the mid-single digits for 2024. In the first quarter, revenue increased 3%, with a 2% bump in the consulting segment.

Palo Alto is growing much faster than IBM. In the January quarter, revenue jumped 19%. The company will report results for the latest quarter on Monday.

Palo Alto more than doubled in value last year and its stock is up 6% in 2024, lifting the company’s market cap past $100 billion. IBM is up close to 5% this year and is now valued at $154 billion.

The companies said the transaction should close by the end of September, subject to regulatory approval and other conditions.

WATCH: IBM CEO Arvind Krishna on revenue miss, consulting business and HashiCorp acquisition