OI
Okta, Inc. (OKTA)·Q2 2026 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 FY26 delivered revenue of $728M (+13% YoY) with non-GAAP diluted EPS of $0.91; both beat S&P Global consensus, and non-GAAP operating margin expanded to 28% from 23% a year ago . The beat was driven by strength in public sector, Auth0, and new product adoption .
- Remaining performance obligations (RPO) rose 18% YoY to $4.152B and cRPO rose 13% YoY to $2.265B, while operating cash flow was $167M (23% margin) and free cash flow $162M (22% margin) .
- Guidance raised: FY26 revenue to $2.875–$2.885B (from $2.850–$2.860B), non-GAAP operating income to $730–$740M (from $710–$720M), EPS to $3.33–$3.38 (from $3.23–$3.28), and FCF margin to ~28% (from ~27%) . Management also removed the prior macro conservatism from guidance .
- Stock-relevant catalysts: DoD-scale deployments (myAuth replacing DS Logon), strong federal renewals and largest deal in the quarter with a DoD agency, and the new Cross App Access protocol for securing AI agents, reinforcing Okta’s identity security fabric narrative .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Public sector momentum: five of the top ten Q2 deals were in U.S. public sector, including the largest deal with a DoD agency; renewals were strong, underscoring mission-critical status of Okta solutions .
- AI and platform innovation: management previewed an “identity security fabric” and introduced Cross App Access to secure AI agents; Okta’s independence and neutrality positioned as strategic advantages versus platform entrants .
- Go-to-market specialization: record pipeline generation, improved AE-driven pipeline, and partner touch on the top 20 deals, supporting productivity gains and second-half execution confidence . “We generated an all-time high for pipe in Q2” (Eric Kelleher) .
What Went Wrong
- Procurement delays and contract restructuring at civilian agencies (headcount reductions), partially offset by upsells of new products within the public sector .
- cRPO growth decelerated vs prior quarter YoY rates (Q4 FY25 cRPO +15% YoY vs Q2 FY26 +13% YoY), reflecting normalization after duration and comp plan changes last year .
- Workforce ACV growth pace drew analyst scrutiny; management emphasized continued efforts to expand awareness and deployment of governance, privileged access, and threat protection to drive upmarket breadth .
Financial Results
Revenue, EPS, Margins vs Prior Periods and Estimates
Segment Revenue Breakdown
KPIs and Cash Flow
Results vs S&P Global Consensus
Values marked with an asterisk (*) were retrieved from S&P Global.
Guidance Changes
Management removed the prior macro “prudence layer” from guidance; go-to-market specialization effects remain embedded .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Okta’s unified identity platform is winning customers… Our solid Q2 results are highlighted by continued strength in new product adoption, the public sector, Auth0, and cash flow” (CEO Todd McKinnon) .
- “We are seeing encouraging signals from our newly specialized go-to-market teams… Securing AI is the next frontier, and our introduction of a new open standard called cross app access is a key part of the solution” (CEO) .
- “We’re removing [macro conservatism] from our outlook for the remainder of the fiscal year… increased specialization will drive long-term growth” (CFO Brett Tighe) .
- “We generated an all-time high for pipe in Q2… 20 of the top 20 deals were all touched by a partner” (COO Eric Kelleher; CFO support) .
- On public sector: “Renewals across all of federal were strong… biggest deal of the quarter with a DoD agency” (CFO) .
Q&A Highlights
- NRR stabilization: CFO reiterated NRR expected to be roughly around recent levels, depending on new vs upsell mix; macro caveat removed given no differentiation observed in Q2 .
- Federal restructuring: Civilian agency restructuring due to layoffs reduced users but offset with upsells of new products, boosting stickiness and renewal rates .
- Sales specialization: Gains in productivity; record pipeline; increased AE-sourced opportunities; extensive partner involvement across largest deals .
- RPO vs cRPO dynamics: Duration normalized after prior comp plan adjustments; current RPO and cRPO relationship reflects contract mix/tenor .
- AI monetization: Near-term monetization through Privileged Access, Governance, Identity Security Posture Management for non-human identities; longer-term plan to manage AI agents within identity system for monetization .
Estimates Context
- Q2 FY26: Revenue $728M vs $711.9M consensus; non-GAAP EPS $0.91 vs $0.846 consensus — both beats, driven by federal/public sector wins, new product adoption, and improved sales productivity .
- Q1 FY26: Revenue $688M vs $680.1M consensus; non-GAAP EPS $0.86 vs $0.771 consensus — beats amid record operating profit and robust FCF .
- Q4 FY25: Revenue $682M vs $669.1M consensus; non-GAAP EPS $0.78 vs $0.736 consensus — beats alongside record profitability and cash flow .
Values marked with an asterisk (*) in tables were retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Identity remains central to security architectures; Okta’s independence and neutrality support vendor-agnostic consolidation, an increasingly strong competitive stance vs platform entrants .
- Federal/public sector is a durable growth vector; the DoD myAuth rollout and largest-deal win point to enterprise-scale validation and multi-year opportunity .
- GTM specialization is working: record pipeline, stronger AE-sourced demand, and robust partner engagement suggest near-term momentum and improved execution .
- Financial quality improving: sustained non-GAAP margin expansion and FCF strength provide operating leverage and capital flexibility (e.g., 2025 notes cash settlement) .
- Raised FY26 guidance and removal of macro prudence indicate heightened confidence; watch cRPO trajectory and NRR mix to gauge growth normalization .
- AI agent security is an emerging catalyst: Cross App Access and identity security fabric could unlock monetization across non-human identities and agent management in 2026+ .
- Non-GAAP framing: Results and guidance rely on non-GAAP measures excluding SBC, intangibles amortization, and certain legal/other items; monitor reconciliations for underlying profitability trends .