While much of the technology sector has faced sharp selloffs in early 2026 over fears that generative AI tools could disrupt traditional software, data services, and knowledge-based industries, cybersecurity stands out as one corner of the market where investors can potentially find shelter from AI disruption while still benefiting from the technology’s widespread adoption, according to a Wednesday research note from Wedbush Securities.
Led by veteran tech analyst Dan Ives—a longstanding and vocal AI bull—Wedbush argues that AI will act as a powerful tailwind for the cybersecurity industry over the coming years. The rapid proliferation of AI deployments is expected to dramatically increase attack frequency, success rates, and blast radius, making protection of data, endpoints, and use cases mission-critical.
“AI will be a major tailwind to the cyber security sector over the coming years as protection of use cases, data, and end points expand markedly,” the analysts wrote. “As attack frequency, success rates, and blast radius rise with AI deployments, cybersecurity becomes even more mission-critical risk management, reinforcing budget resilience in this new AI driven IT budget world.”
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Gartner projects global spending on AI cybersecurity to reach $51 billion in 2026, roughly doubling from the prior year, underscoring the sector’s rapid growth trajectory. Cybersecurity remains one of the fastest-growing categories of enterprise IT spending, with budgets proving resilient even in periods of broader tech spending caution.
Why Cybersecurity Is Seen as AI-Resilient
Wedbush and other analysts view cybersecurity as a “double-edged sword” beneficiary of AI:
- Defensive upside — AI enables faster threat detection, automated response, behavioral analytics, and predictive intelligence, strengthening defenders’ capabilities.
- Offensive threat amplification — AI empowers attackers with more sophisticated phishing, automated vulnerability scanning, polymorphic malware, deepfakes for social engineering, and faster exploit development—driving demand for advanced protection.
Unlike many software categories facing potential disintermediation or pricing pressure from AI agents and automation, cybersecurity demand is expected to rise as organizations seek to secure AI systems themselves, protect expanding attack surfaces (cloud, edge, IoT, data pipelines), and comply with stricter regulations around AI governance and data privacy.
Wedbush identified three stocks as best-positioned to capitalize on this dynamic:
- CrowdStrike — “We believe that CRWD’s position as the gold standard of cybersecurity remains firmly unchanged in the face of this software sell-off with the company’s innovative, best-in-class Falcon platform becoming increasingly effective in the modern threat landscape as AI adversaries become an incrementally larger threat for enterprises heading down the AI path.”
- Palo Alto Networks — “AI is not displacing PANW’s value proposition, but has actually made it more relevant, not less, as it is forcing customers to consolidate vendors, improve visibility, and automate response as threats become more adaptive and effective.”
- Zscaler — Highlighted for its cloud-native zero-trust architecture, which aligns well with securing distributed AI workloads, remote users, and cloud-based AI infrastructure.
The cybersecurity sector has shown relative resilience amid the broader 2026 tech selloff. While software stocks broadly declined on fears of AI-driven disruption, cybersecurity names have held up better, supported by sustained enterprise budget priority and visible secular growth drivers. CrowdStrike, Palo Alto Networks, and Zscaler have each outperformed the broader Nasdaq and software indices year-to-date, with CrowdStrike particularly benefiting from its Falcon platform’s reputation as a leading endpoint detection and response (EDR) solution in an era of increasingly sophisticated threats.
The sector’s resilience is further bolstered by regulatory tailwinds—stricter data privacy laws (GDPR, CCPA expansions), SEC cybersecurity disclosure rules, and emerging AI-specific governance frameworks—that force companies to increase security spending regardless of broader IT budget cycles.
However, there are still risks while Wedbush is bullish. A prolonged economic slowdown could pressure IT budgets, even in security. Competitive intensity is high, with legacy players (Fortinet, Check Point), cloud-native vendors (Cloudflare, Okta), and emerging startups all vying for share. Rapid AI advancement could also empower attackers faster than defenders in some scenarios, requiring continuous platform evolution.
However, the consensus view among analysts is that cybersecurity remains one of the most structurally advantaged sectors in the AI era. Demand is driven not by discretionary IT projects but by necessity—protecting assets, complying with regulations, and mitigating existential risks from AI-augmented threats.
As AI adoption accelerates across enterprises, cybersecurity spending is widely expected to remain resilient and likely accelerate. Wedbush’s note reinforces the emerging narrative: while AI may disrupt certain software categories, it is simultaneously creating a massive, secular growth driver for the companies tasked with securing the AI-powered world.



