The biggest company on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange is now… a Silicon Valley giant.
Palo Alto Networks (PANW) announced plans to dual-list on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE) following the completion of its massive $25 billion acquisition of CyberArk. With a market cap of ~$115 billion, Palo Alto will immediately become the most valuable company trading on the Israeli exchange, eclipsing local heavyweights.
🤝 THE “CYBR” HOMECOMING:
- The Symbol: Interestingly, PANW will trade in Tel Aviv under the ticker “CYBR”—preserving CyberArk’s identity as a “cornerstone” of the combined global strategy.
- The Rationale: The company called the listing a “powerful tribute” to CyberArk’s roots, designed to give local institutional and retail investors direct access to the company’s growth.
- The Footprint: This deal solidifies Israel as Palo Alto’s most critical R&D hub outside of Silicon Valley, tapping into the talent density that CEO Nikesh Arora needs for the AI cybersecurity arms race.
💰 THE DEAL CLOSING:
- Terms: CyberArk shareholders received $45 in cash and 2.2005 shares of Palo Alto stock for each share owned.
- Strategic Goal: To build the world’s most comprehensive cybersecurity platform, integrating CyberArk’s Identity Security dominance with PANW’s network and cloud security stack.
📉 THE CONTRAST: While Palo Alto leans in, domestic rival Check Point Software (CHKP) confirmed earlier today that it will remain solely listed on the Nasdaq, declining to pursue a dual listing despite the TASE’s push for local tech giants to come home.
💡 ANALYST TAKEAWAY: This is a masterclass in post-merger integration. Usually, when a US giant buys an Israeli tech firm, there is a fear of “brain drain” and capital flight. By dual-listing, Nikesh Arora is doing the opposite: he is integrating the Israeli capital market into Palo Alto’s equity story. He effectively turns every CyberArk employee and local investor into a long-term stakeholder in the parent company.
👇 Israeli Tech Investors: Does having a $115B US giant listed on the TASE validate the local market, or does it overshadow homegrown listings?
