Shares of Commvault, a data protection software company, experienced a 4.2% drop during the morning session following an initiation of coverage by Jefferies, which assigned a ‘hold’ rating to the stock. Analyst Joseph Gallo expressed caution ahead of the company’s impending earnings report, noting that while Commvault had reaffirmed its guidance for the fourth quarter, he perceives “little upside” to current expectations and indicated “some risk” to the consensus growth forecast for the fiscal year 2027.
This new rating alongside the cautious outlook has likely contributed to investor uncertainty as the company prepares to announce its fourth-quarter fiscal 2026 results. Analysts on Wall Street are already predicting a sequential decline from Commvault’s strong performance in the previous quarter, heightening pre-earnings anxiety among investors.
Commvault’s stock is historically volatile, having recorded 16 price movements exceeding 5% in the last year alone. The current sell-off suggests that the market finds the news significant, yet it does not seem to alter the fundamental view of the business.
Just four days ago, the stock witnessed a 5.7% decline when Scotiabank began covering Commvault with a ‘Sector Perform’ rating and a price target of $105. Scotiabank’s analysis highlighted the competitive nature of the data protection, backup, and cyber recovery market, raising concerns that Commvault’s growth may rely heavily on its existing customer base rather than attracting new clients. The firm also pointed out that it does not foresee any upside to the consensus fiscal 2027 targets.
This cautious approach by analysts has overshadowed some recent positive announcements from Commvault, including the expansion of its cloud services to include Google Cloud Storage.
Year-to-date, Commvault’s stock has plunged 27.9%, currently trading at $89.58 per share—representing a significant 54.2% decrease from its 52-week high of $195.41 reached in September 2025. Despite these downward trends, investors who purchased $1,000 worth of Commvault shares five years ago would still see a modest return, with their investment worth approximately $1,270 today.
Amidst this market turmoil, analysts and investors are weighing whether ongoing volatility might present buying opportunities for a high-quality stock in a competitive landscape.


