We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience.
This includes personalizing content and advertising.
By pressing "Accept All" or closing out of this banner, you consent to the use of all cookies and similar technologies and the sharing of information they collect with third parties.
You can reject marketing cookies by pressing "Deny Optional," but we still use essential, performance, and functional cookies.
In addition, whether you "Accept All," Deny Optional," click the X or otherwise continue to use the site, you accept our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service, revised from time to time.
You are being directed to ZacksTrade, a division of LBMZ Securities and licensed broker-dealer. ZacksTrade and Zacks.com are separate companies. The web link between the two companies is not a solicitation or offer to invest in a particular security or type of security. ZacksTrade does not endorse or adopt any particular investment strategy, any analyst opinion/rating/report or any approach to evaluating individual securities.
If you wish to go to ZacksTrade, click OK. If you do not, click Cancel.
SAIL beat Q1 estimates and raised FY2027 targets for ARR, revenue and adjusted operating margin.
SAIL says nonhuman identities drove 40% of identity growth; Agentic Fabric ties AI agents to human owners.
SAIL says agentic pipeline is doubling QoQ; expects AI impact later in year, with SaaS leading new ARR.
SailPoint, Inc. (SAIL - Free Report) used its first-quarter fiscal 2027 earnings call to make a broader point than the quarter’s beat. Management framed identity security for AI agents and other nonhuman users as the next major control problem for enterprises, with SailPoint positioning itself at the center of that shift.
That message came with solid execution. The company topped the Zacks Consensus Estimate on both earnings and revenue, then raised full-year targets for ARR, revenue and adjusted operating margin.
SAIL Pushes an Agentic Identity Thesis
Chief executive officer Mark McClain used prepared remarks to argue that identity security is becoming a core layer of enterprise AI adoption, not just a compliance function. He said nonhuman identities represented 40% of identity growth in the quarter and 14% of all identities managed in SailPoint’s cloud offering.
McClain centered the discussion on the newly introduced Agentic Fabric, which is designed to discover, govern and assign AI agents to accountable human owners. He said customers need that link because agents can act autonomously, access sensitive data and operate outside traditional IT controls.
He also emphasized breadth as a differentiator, saying SailPoint can govern both modern cloud environments and harder-to-reach legacy systems. That broader platform story shaped much of the call’s forward-looking tone.
SailPoint Shows Growth With Better Profitability
Chief financial officer Brian Carolan said the quarter finished above the high end of guidance for ARR, revenue and adjusted operating margin. Total ARR rose 26% year over year to $1.163 billion, while SaaS ARR increased 36% to $781 million. Revenue rose 22% to $280.1 million.
Adjusted operating margin expanded to 13.5% from 10.2% a year earlier. Adjusted EPS was $0.05, topping the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $0.04, producing a 17.65% earnings surprise. Revenue of $280.14 million also exceeded the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $276.25 million by 1.41%.
Cash generation also improved. SailPoint reported $38.2 million in operating cash flow and $32.5 million in free cash flow against negative figures in the prior-year period.
Management flowed first-quarter upside into the rest of the year. For the second quarter, SailPoint guided to ARR of $1.218 billion to $1.222 billion, revenue of $308 million to $312 million and adjusted EPS of $0.07 to $0.08.
For fiscal 2027, the company now expects ARR of $1.364 billion to $1.374 billion, revenue of $1.265 billion to $1.275 billion and adjusted operating margin of 18.7% to 19.3%.
Carolan said the company also expects about $200 million of free cash flow for the year.
A key assumption did not change. Management still expects 90% to 95% of net new ARR to come from SaaS, even as that mix can pressure near-term revenue recognition and margins.
SailPoint Sees AI Demand, But Later-Year Impact
Analyst questions focused heavily on timing. A Piper Sandler analyst asked when the fast-growing agentic pipeline would begin to influence results, and McClain said customer engagement has accelerated since the Agentic Fabric launch, even if the benefit is not yet showing up meaningfully in reported numbers.
President Matthew Mills added that SailPoint is running workshops that bring together customer identity, AI and security teams, often exposing governance gaps that were not previously coordinated. He said the company is seeing an acceleration in sales activity and that its agentic pipeline has been doubling quarter over quarter since inception.
Later in the call, Carolan told an Evercore ISI analyst that the AI-related contribution is still early but should show up more in the latter half of the year, with only minimal impact embedded in current guidance.
SAIL Uses Pricing and Migrations to Deepen Reach
Management also pointed to modernization as a bridge between the core identity business and newer AI-related products. Carolan said ARR from migration activity more than doubled year over year, and about one-third of migrations in the quarter used the company’s modernization Flex offering.
Mills said the company’s hybrid pricing structure is meant to reduce customer hesitation around nonhuman identities by bundling some baseline capacity with human identity licenses and then adding usage packs as needs expand.
That mattered in the call because management repeatedly tied future monetization to nonhuman identity growth, API calls, workflows and other consumption measures rather than to a simple seat count.
SailPoint Leaves a Clear Strategic Message
The call’s broader tone was confident, but it was also disciplined. Executives did not declare a near-term AI windfall. Instead, they described a market that is still forming, with customer urgency rising faster than reported revenue contribution.
Management’s posture coming out of the quarter was that SailPoint’s advantage lies in tying AI agents and other nonhuman identities back to human governance, while using its existing enterprise footprint to expand adoption over time.
Zacks Rank and Style Scores Signal a Mixed Setup
SAIL currently carries a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold), with a Value Score of F, Growth Score of B, Momentum Score of C and VGM Score of C. Under Zacks’ framework, a Rank #3 can still be held, while the better letter grades remain the more favorable signals within that middle ranking.
The Style Score framework is designed to complement, not override, the Zacks Rank, with the strongest combinations generally found in Zacks Rank #1 or #2 (Buy) stocks that also carry A or B style grades. That makes SAIL’s current setup more balanced than decisive, especially since the Zacks Rank can change as earnings estimate revisions adjust after the latest results.
Zacks' 7 Best Strong Buy Stocks (New Research Report)
Valued at $99, click below to receive our just-released report
predicting the 7 stocks that will soar highest in the coming month.
Image: Bigstock
SAIL Q1 Earnings Call Spotlights AI Identity Push
Key Takeaways
SailPoint, Inc. (SAIL - Free Report) used its first-quarter fiscal 2027 earnings call to make a broader point than the quarter’s beat. Management framed identity security for AI agents and other nonhuman users as the next major control problem for enterprises, with SailPoint positioning itself at the center of that shift.
That message came with solid execution. The company topped the Zacks Consensus Estimate on both earnings and revenue, then raised full-year targets for ARR, revenue and adjusted operating margin.
SAIL Pushes an Agentic Identity Thesis
Chief executive officer Mark McClain used prepared remarks to argue that identity security is becoming a core layer of enterprise AI adoption, not just a compliance function. He said nonhuman identities represented 40% of identity growth in the quarter and 14% of all identities managed in SailPoint’s cloud offering.
McClain centered the discussion on the newly introduced Agentic Fabric, which is designed to discover, govern and assign AI agents to accountable human owners. He said customers need that link because agents can act autonomously, access sensitive data and operate outside traditional IT controls.
He also emphasized breadth as a differentiator, saying SailPoint can govern both modern cloud environments and harder-to-reach legacy systems. That broader platform story shaped much of the call’s forward-looking tone.
SailPoint Shows Growth With Better Profitability
Chief financial officer Brian Carolan said the quarter finished above the high end of guidance for ARR, revenue and adjusted operating margin. Total ARR rose 26% year over year to $1.163 billion, while SaaS ARR increased 36% to $781 million. Revenue rose 22% to $280.1 million.
Adjusted operating margin expanded to 13.5% from 10.2% a year earlier. Adjusted EPS was $0.05, topping the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $0.04, producing a 17.65% earnings surprise. Revenue of $280.14 million also exceeded the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $276.25 million by 1.41%.
Cash generation also improved. SailPoint reported $38.2 million in operating cash flow and $32.5 million in free cash flow against negative figures in the prior-year period.
SailPoint, Inc. Price, Consensus and EPS Surprise
SailPoint, Inc. price-consensus-eps-surprise-chart | SailPoint, Inc. Quote
SAIL Raises the Bar for Fiscal 2027
Management flowed first-quarter upside into the rest of the year. For the second quarter, SailPoint guided to ARR of $1.218 billion to $1.222 billion, revenue of $308 million to $312 million and adjusted EPS of $0.07 to $0.08.
For fiscal 2027, the company now expects ARR of $1.364 billion to $1.374 billion, revenue of $1.265 billion to $1.275 billion and adjusted operating margin of 18.7% to 19.3%.
Carolan said the company also expects about $200 million of free cash flow for the year.
A key assumption did not change. Management still expects 90% to 95% of net new ARR to come from SaaS, even as that mix can pressure near-term revenue recognition and margins.
SailPoint Sees AI Demand, But Later-Year Impact
Analyst questions focused heavily on timing. A Piper Sandler analyst asked when the fast-growing agentic pipeline would begin to influence results, and McClain said customer engagement has accelerated since the Agentic Fabric launch, even if the benefit is not yet showing up meaningfully in reported numbers.
President Matthew Mills added that SailPoint is running workshops that bring together customer identity, AI and security teams, often exposing governance gaps that were not previously coordinated. He said the company is seeing an acceleration in sales activity and that its agentic pipeline has been doubling quarter over quarter since inception.
Later in the call, Carolan told an Evercore ISI analyst that the AI-related contribution is still early but should show up more in the latter half of the year, with only minimal impact embedded in current guidance.
SAIL Uses Pricing and Migrations to Deepen Reach
Management also pointed to modernization as a bridge between the core identity business and newer AI-related products. Carolan said ARR from migration activity more than doubled year over year, and about one-third of migrations in the quarter used the company’s modernization Flex offering.
Mills said the company’s hybrid pricing structure is meant to reduce customer hesitation around nonhuman identities by bundling some baseline capacity with human identity licenses and then adding usage packs as needs expand.
That mattered in the call because management repeatedly tied future monetization to nonhuman identity growth, API calls, workflows and other consumption measures rather than to a simple seat count.
SailPoint Leaves a Clear Strategic Message
The call’s broader tone was confident, but it was also disciplined. Executives did not declare a near-term AI windfall. Instead, they described a market that is still forming, with customer urgency rising faster than reported revenue contribution.
Management’s posture coming out of the quarter was that SailPoint’s advantage lies in tying AI agents and other nonhuman identities back to human governance, while using its existing enterprise footprint to expand adoption over time.
Zacks Rank and Style Scores Signal a Mixed Setup
SAIL currently carries a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold), with a Value Score of F, Growth Score of B, Momentum Score of C and VGM Score of C. Under Zacks’ framework, a Rank #3 can still be held, while the better letter grades remain the more favorable signals within that middle ranking.
A B Growth Score points to stronger growth characteristics, but the F Value Score and C VGM Score imply a less compelling overall style profile.You can see the complete list of today’s Zacks #1 Rank (Strong Buy) stocks here.
The Style Score framework is designed to complement, not override, the Zacks Rank, with the strongest combinations generally found in Zacks Rank #1 or #2 (Buy) stocks that also carry A or B style grades. That makes SAIL’s current setup more balanced than decisive, especially since the Zacks Rank can change as earnings estimate revisions adjust after the latest results.