--- title: "Check Point Software Balances Margin Strength With GTM Pains" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/286984857.md" description: "Check Point Software's Q1 earnings call highlighted strong profitability with a non-GAAP operating income of $265 million and a 40% operating margin. Subscription revenue rose 11% to $323 million, driving growth despite a decline in product sales due to a go-to-market transition. The company adjusted its full-year revenue guidance to $2.770 billion to $2.850 billion, citing appliance headwinds and rising component costs. Management remains optimistic about recovery in the second half, supported by robust cash flow and strategic investments in AI." datetime: "2026-05-20T01:13:11.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/286984857.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286984857.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/286984857.md) --- # Check Point Software Balances Margin Strength With GTM Pains Check Point Software ((CHKP)) has held its Q1 earnings call. Read on for the main highlights of the call. ### Claim 55% Off TipRanks - Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions - Discover top-performing stock ideas and upgrade to a portfolio of market leaders with Smart Investor Picks Check Point Software’s latest earnings call struck a cautiously optimistic tone, as management balanced strong profitability, cash generation and subscription momentum against a softer product top line. Executives framed the quarter as evidence of resilient fundamentals, while acknowledging that go-to-market changes disrupted appliance sales and forced a modest revenue reset they insist is temporary. ## Strong profitability and margins Check Point underscored its profitability profile, reporting non‑GAAP operating income of $265 million and a robust 40% operating margin. Non‑GAAP EPS climbed 13% year over year to $2.50, while GAAP EPS increased about 5% to $1.81, supporting the company’s reputation for disciplined execution even amid sales friction. ## Robust free cash flow generation Investors received another reminder of Check Point’s cash machine status, with adjusted free cash flow reaching $457 million, up 11% from a year earlier. Management highlighted that this figure exceeded the midpoint of guidance by about $70 million, reinforcing flexibility for buybacks, acquisitions and continued investment. ## Subscription revenue strength Subscriptions remained the engine of growth, rising 11% year over year to $323 million and serving as the primary top-line driver. Management signaled confidence that subscription growth will accelerate in the second half, as newer offerings gain traction and sales execution normalizes. ## Emerging technologies high growth Emerging products like email security, CTEM and SASE continued to scale rapidly, delivering around 45% year‑over‑year growth in calculated billings. CTEM annual recurring revenue nearly doubled, jumping 96%, with these three emerging lines now accounting for just under 30% of subscription ARR and forming a key pillar of future expansion. ## Solid top-line and backlog metrics Despite product softness, total revenue rose 5% year over year to $668 million, only $2 million shy of guidance midpoint. Deferred revenue climbed 8% to $2.06 billion and remaining performance obligations increased 7% to $2.592 billion, signaling healthy underlying demand and visibility into future revenues. ## Healthy balance sheet and capital returns The balance sheet remained a standout, with $4.4 billion in cash and short‑term deposits providing ample strategic firepower. Check Point deployed capital on both offense and defense, closing a roughly $92 million acquisition in February and repurchasing 1.9 million shares for $325 million at an average price near $170. ## High gross margin Gross profitability stayed exceptionally strong, as gross profit rose to $586 million. The company maintained an 88% gross margin, underscoring the high‑margin nature of its software‑centric and subscription mix even as it navigates product‐side turbulence and rising costs. ## Strategic leadership and AI investments Management emphasized recent leadership hires, including a new chief revenue officer and a general manager focused on AI security, to sharpen execution. Alongside organizational changes, Check Point is rolling out initiatives like an AI Defense Plan and AI Factory Security Blueprint, plus deepening a major cloud partnership while funding foundational AI models and related R&D. ## Product revenue weakness The quarter’s main blemish came from weaker product revenues, particularly firewall appliances, which lagged internal expectations. Management attributed the shortfall to near‑term disruption rather than fading demand, and argued that the impact should diminish as the revamped go‑to‑market model beds in. ## Go-to-market transition caused sales disruption A sweeping go‑to‑market overhaul, including reassigning account managers and changing leadership roles, created execution friction across the sales force. These internal shifts slowed new‑business funnel creation, especially for longer‑cycle firewall deals, and contributed directly to the softer hardware performance. ## Calculated billings decline Calculated billings edged down 1% year over year to $548 million, signaling some near‑term drag on growth metrics. However, current calculated billings still grew 2%, giving management confidence that underlying momentum remains intact as sales cycles normalize and the new sales structure stabilizes. ## Near-term revenue guidance adjustment Reflecting appliance headwinds, the company trimmed full‑year revenue expectations to a range of $2.770 billion to $2.850 billion, warning of a steeper product decline in the second quarter. Management nevertheless reiterated that they expect product trends to recover in the back half of the year, with subscriptions continuing to underpin overall growth. ## Rising component costs Cost inflation is another watchpoint, as management noted continued increases in memory pricing that weigh on hardware economics. They said these pressures were factored into the updated product revenue outlook and acknowledged that sustained cost escalation could compress product margins if not offset by pricing or mix. ## Operating expense pressure Operating expenses also climbed, reflecting heavier investment in people and growth initiatives, with OpEx excluding R&D grants up 14% and 12% in constant currency. Net of grants, operating expenses reached $321 million, up 5%, as the company spends on AI and security R&D along with more aggressive sales and marketing. ## AI security revenue still nascent While the AI security pipeline is expanding and customer interest rising, management cautioned that revenue contributions from AI‑specific offerings will take time. They guided investors to view AI security as a more material standalone revenue stream closer to 2027, rather than expecting a dramatic shift as soon as next year. ## Forward-looking guidance and outlook For the second quarter, Check Point forecast revenue between $660 million and $690 million, with subscription revenue of $328 million to $338 million and non‑GAAP EPS of $2.40 to $2.50. Full‑year guidance keeps subscription revenue, non‑GAAP EPS of $10.05 to $10.85 and adjusted free cash flow targets intact, positioning current headwinds as transitional while emerging products and subscriptions carry the growth story. Check Point’s earnings call painted the picture of a company absorbing self‑inflicted short‑term pain to retool for longer‑term growth in a rapidly evolving security landscape. Investors will watch closely whether appliance sales recover as promised, but for now the combination of high margins, strong cash flow and accelerating subscriptions keeps the long‑term narrative intact, albeit with a bumpier near‑term road. ### Related Stocks - [CHKP.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/CHKP.US.md) ## Related News & Research - [Zscaler (ZS) Stock Jumps after 5-Star Analyst Says 'AI Is an Opportunity, Not a Threat'](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286824294.md) - [William Power Reiterates Buy on Dynatrace, Citing Strong Subscription Growth, Robust Margins, and Attractive Long-Term Risk-Reward](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286268848.md) - [Why Agilysys Stock Rallied Today](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286975134.md) - [Plex is tripling the price of a lifetime pass to $750 after doubling it last year](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286975868.md) - [Agilysys Q4 revenue rises on subscription growth](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286814791.md)