Key Highlights
- Shares of Akamai spiked approximately 23% during Friday’s premarket session following the disclosure of a $1.8 billion, seven-year cloud infrastructure agreement with an undisclosed “leading frontier model provider”
- First-quarter earnings per share reached $1.61, marginally exceeding the Street’s forecast of $1.60; sales climbed 6% to $1.074 billion
- Revenue from cloud infrastructure services surged 40% compared to the prior-year period
- The company elevated its fiscal 2026 projections to $6.40–$7.15 per share and $4.445–$4.55 billion in total revenue
- Second-quarter projections disappointed, with earnings guidance of $1.45–$1.65 versus the Street’s $1.68 estimate
Shares of Akamai Technologies (AKAM) exploded approximately 23% during Friday’s premarket session, reaching $143.69, following the company’s announcement of a major AI infrastructure agreement that eclipsed an otherwise steady quarterly performance.
Akamai Technologies, Inc., AKAM
The Cambridge-based technology firm disclosed that an unnamed “leading frontier model provider” has pledged $1.8 billion across a seven-year period for cloud infrastructure services. This revelation came after Thursday’s market close, packaged alongside first-quarter financial results.
AKAM finished Thursday’s trading session down 4.3% at $116.69, though the stock had already gained roughly 34% year-to-date prior to Friday’s premarket surge.
First-quarter profits registered at $1.61 per share, edging past the consensus forecast of $1.60 by a single penny. This compared to $1.70 per share during the same period last year. Total revenue advanced 6% to $1.074 billion, slightly surpassing analyst projections of $1.073 billion.
The headline figure within the earnings report was cloud infrastructure services revenue, which exploded 40% on a year-over-year basis. Meanwhile, the company’s security division maintained momentum with 11% sales expansion.
Chief Executive Tom Leighton characterized the AI agreement as confirmation of Akamai’s strategic positioning. “We are very pleased to announce that a leading frontier model provider has committed to $1.8 billion over seven years for CIS, further validating our position as a key infrastructure provider in the AI economy,” he stated.
Leighton also emphasized the security division’s importance. “Our enterprise customers need our security products and expertise more than ever before,” he noted.
Second-Quarter Projections Fall Short
For the current quarter, Akamai issued guidance calling for earnings of $1.45 to $1.65 per share alongside revenue of $1.075 billion to $1.1 billion. Wall Street analysts had been modeling $1.68 per share on sales of $1.104 billion — both figures exceeding the company’s upper range.
The shortfall in near-term guidance appeared to have minimal impact on investor sentiment, as the transformative AI contract clearly dominated the narrative.
Annual Projections Elevated
For the complete fiscal year, Akamai now anticipates earnings between $6.40 and $7.15 per share with revenue spanning $4.445 billion to $4.55 billion. The Street consensus currently stands at $6.86 in earnings and $4.47 billion in sales — both comfortably within the revised range.
This updated forecast represents an improvement from the February outlook of $6.20 to $7.20 per share on $4.4 billion to $4.55 billion in revenue.
Akamai currently trades at a price-to-earnings multiple of roughly 37.89x, approaching its five-year peak of 38.31x, indicating the shares command a valuation premium relative to historical norms.
Regarding insider activity, company officers disposed of approximately $9.7 million worth of shares during the previous three months, with 13 selling transactions recorded and zero purchases reported.
The firm’s GF Score registers at 82 out of 100, with profitability and growth metrics both earning 9/10 ratings. Financial strength receives a comparatively modest 6/10 score.
Following Friday’s premarket rally, Akamai’s market capitalization stands at approximately $17.18 billion.



