
Dynatrace (NYSE:DT) shares leaped more than 10% in premarket trading Monday after the observability leader blew past fiscal third-quarter estimates and unveiled a massive new $1 billion share repurchase program, underscoring management’s confidence in its AI-driven momentum.
The Boston-based software giant posted annual recurring revenue (ARR) of $1.97 billion, a 20% year-over-year jump that easily cleared Wall Street’s $1.94 billion target.
Revenue for the quarter rose 18% to $515 million, driven by the rapid adoption of its "Grail" data lakehouse and new agentic AI capabilities launched at its recent Perform conference.
On the bottom line, Dynatrace delivered non-GAAP earnings of $0.44 per share, beating the consensus of $0.41 as the company maintained a high-tier 30% operating margin.
The highlight for investors was a substantial upgrade to the company’s capital return strategy.
Having nearly exhausted a previous $500 million buyback, the board authorized a fresh $1 billion repurchase program with no expiration date.
Looking ahead, Dynatrace raised its full-year fiscal 2026 revenue guidance to a range of $2.005 billion to $2.010 billion.
The company also anticipates finishing the year with ARR as high as $2.06 billion, signaling that the demand for "causal AI"—which provides deterministic answers rather than just probabilistic guesses—is insulating Dynatrace from the broader slowdown hitting legacy monitoring vendors.