CrowdStrike, Okta lead cyber selloff after Anthropic’s Claude update - Invezz
InvezzArchived Mar 19, 2026✓ Full text saved
CrowdStrike, Okta lead cyber selloff after Anthropic’s Claude update Invezz
Full text archived locally
✦ AI Summary· Claude Sonnet
CrowdStrike, Okta lead cyber selloff after Anthropic’s Claude update
Artificial intelligence
Author
Devesh Kumar
Feb 20, 2026, 19:37 PM
CrowdStrike, Okta lead cyber selloff after Claude update.
New AI tool scans code and drafts fixes for human review.
Sector ETF drops 3.8%, extending year-to-date losses.
Cybersecurity stocks were hit hard on Friday as investors digested a new move from Anthropic that pushes Claude further into a job long dominated by specialist security software.
CrowdStrike and Okta led the decline, with other cybersecurity names moving lower as investors weighed recurring strategic questions.
The answer is showing up in prices with CrowdStrike slipping as much as 6.5%, Cloudflare dropping more than 6%, Okta plunging 5.7%, Zscaler falling 3.5% and SailPoint shedding 6.8%.
The Global X Cybersecurity ETF declined as much as 3.8%, extending its year-to-date loss to 14%.
Why Claude spooked the market
Anthropic said its new capability, “Claude Code Security,” scans codebases for security vulnerabilities and suggests targeted software patches for human review, and it is being released in a limited research preview.
In simple words, it reads a company’s software like a security analyst would, flags potential weak spots, and drafts fixes, but leaves the final decision to humans, rather than auto-applying changes.
That “human-in-the-loop” design matters because false alarms are expensive in security, and bad fixes can create new problems.
Anthropic says the tool tries to reduce that risk by re-checking its own findings in multiple stages, assigning severity ratings so teams can focus, and adding a confidence rating so reviewers can judge how much to trust each alert.
Also Read: Anthropic lands $30B at $380B valuation as AI funding hits new extreme
AI as a product, not just a feature
Friday’s selloff also fits into a broader market narrative that’s been building for weeks.
The investors are increasingly wary that AI-native tools could chip away at software companies’ pricing power by offering “good enough” alternatives embedded in the coding workflow.
The fear is not that security spending disappears, but that some work shifts from standalone security products toward AI-assisted scanning and remediation that feels more like a built-in utility than a separate subscription line item.
To be clear, Anthropic is positioning Claude Code Security as a defensive tool and stresses that nothing is applied without human approval.
It also frames the rollout as a controlled preview, limited to Enterprise and Team customers, with expedited access for maintainers of open-source repositories.
But markets often trade the direction of travel, not the fine print, and the direction here is that frontier AI models are moving from writing code to policing it.
For the cybersecurity vendors that sold off, the near-term question is whether this is a headline-driven reset or the start of a tougher competitive conversation in earnings calls.
Investors will be watching for signs that incumbents can defend their moat by tying AI into broader platforms like endpoint protection, identity, network security, and response, where outcomes, data and real-time threat intel still matter as much as code analysis.
Related News Stock markets Economy Trading ideas Forex Commodities AI Bonds Features Press releases
Mar 19, 2026, 19:39 PM
Artificial intelligence
Evening digest: Bitcoin steadies, Goldman Sachs to start layoffs in April
Mar 19, 2026, 18:43 PM
Europe
European bulletin: central banks turn hawkish, Lamborghini profits fall
Mar 19, 2026, 18:05 PM
Stock market
Analyst says SoundHound stock can double as CFO announces departure
Mar 19, 2026, 17:54 PM
Artificial intelligence
AI data center boom drives lithium demand as supply risks grow
Mar 19, 2026, 17:23 PM
Artificial intelligence
OpenAI acquires Astral: is it enough to catch up with Anthropic's Claude