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If you are wondering whether Fortinet’s current share price still offers value, you are not alone, especially with cybersecurity staying front of mind for many investors.
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Fortinet’s stock closed at US$84.20, with returns of 3.8% over the last 7 days, 1.7% over 30 days, 8.1% year to date, but a 14.3% decline over 1 year, while the 3 and 5 year returns sit at 38.3% and 122.1% respectively.
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Recent attention on Fortinet has been shaped by ongoing interest in cybersecurity companies, alongside broader tech sentiment that can shift quickly as investors reassess growth and risk. These moves provide useful context for thinking about what investors are currently willing to pay for Fortinet’s future cash flows.
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Right now, Fortinet scores a 2 out of 6 valuation score. In this article, we will unpack that score using several common valuation approaches, then finish with a broader framework that can help you think about the company’s value in a more complete way.
Fortinet scores just 2/6 on our valuation checks. See what other red flags we found in the full valuation breakdown.
A Discounted Cash Flow, or DCF, model estimates what a company might be worth by projecting its future cash flows and then discounting those back to today, so you can compare that value with the current share price.
For Fortinet, the model used is a 2 Stage Free Cash Flow to Equity approach. The company’s latest twelve month free cash flow is about $2.23b. Analyst and extrapolated projections suggest free cash flow could reach around $3.98b by 2030, with ten year forecasts stepping up from $2.51b in 2026 to $5.48b in 2035, all in dollars and then discounted back to today using Simply Wall St’s assumptions.
On this basis, the DCF model arrives at an estimated intrinsic value of about $99.63 per share, compared with the recent share price of $84.20. That implies the stock is around 15.5% undervalued according to these cash flow projections.
Result: UNDERVALUED
Our Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis suggests Fortinet is undervalued by 15.5%. Track this in your watchlist or portfolio, or discover 48 more high quality undervalued stocks.
For a profitable company like Fortinet, the P/E ratio is a useful way to think about value because it links what you pay today with the earnings the business is already generating. Investors typically accept a higher or lower P/E based on what they expect for future growth and how risky they perceive those earnings to be.
Fortinet currently trades on a P/E of 33.61x. That sits above the broader Software industry average of 26.99x, but below the peer group average of 53.26x, which suggests the market is pricing Fortinet at a premium to the sector overall, yet not as highly as some direct peers.
Simply Wall St also calculates a “Fair Ratio” for each company, which is the P/E multiple it might trade on given factors such as earnings growth, profit margins, industry, market cap and company specific risks. This tends to be more tailored than a simple peer or industry comparison, because it accounts for Fortinet’s own characteristics rather than assuming all Software companies should trade at similar multiples. Fortinet’s Fair Ratio is 31.95x, slightly below its current 33.61x P/E, which suggests the shares screen as somewhat expensive on this metric.
Result: OVERVALUED
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Earlier we mentioned that there is an even better way to understand valuation, so let us introduce you to Narratives, which are simply your story about Fortinet linked to a clear forecast and fair value. On Simply Wall St’s Community page you can see how different investors express this, from a more cautious fair value around US$68 that leans on concerns about hardware dependence and slower revenue growth, through a consensus view near US$87 that balances service growth with hardware and margin risks, up to a more optimistic fair value around US$109 that leans on SASE, AI security and recurring revenue. The platform constantly refreshes these Narratives when new news or earnings arrive so you can compare each Narrative’s fair value with Fortinet’s current price and decide whether the stock looks closer to a buy, sell, or hold for your own view.
For Fortinet however we’ll make it really easy for you with previews of two leading Fortinet Narratives:
🐂 Fortinet Bull Case
Fair value: US$99.03 per share
Pricing gap vs recent close: about 15.0% undervalued using this narrative
Revenue growth assumption: 12%
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Highlights Fortinet’s strong GAAP profitability, with operating and net margins around 30%, supported by an organic growth model that avoids heavy acquisition related charges.
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Views the current P/E of roughly 40x as more reasonable when set against a much higher 10 year historical average around 140x, which the author sees as a relative valuation improvement.
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Frames Fortinet as a founder led, operationally efficient business with robust free cash flow and a large customer base, while still flagging hardware reliance and past security vulnerabilities as key risks.
🐻 Fortinet Bear Case
Fair value: US$68.00 per share
Pricing gap vs recent close: about 23.8% overvalued using this narrative
Revenue growth assumption: 9.05%
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Argues that Fortinet’s hardware centric model is exposed as customers move toward cloud native and software defined security, which could affect pricing power and long term revenue growth.
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Points to rising compliance and regulatory costs, competition in unified threat intelligence, and execution risk as Fortinet expands beyond hardware focused markets as pressures on margins and earnings visibility.
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Bases its fair value on a more cautious set of analyst assumptions for revenue, profit margins and future P/E, and encourages investors to sense check those numbers against their own expectations.
Do you think there’s more to the story for Fortinet? Head over to our Community to see what others are saying!
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.
Companies discussed in this article include FTNT.
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