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Business News/ Opinion / Online-views/  Cyber attacks are certain, cyber security business is not
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Cyber attacks are certain, cyber security business is not

Even as cyber attacks become more prevalent and damaging, they haven't been a universal triumph for the cyber security industry

WannaCry digital extortion attack crippled hundreds of thousands computers worldwide. Photo: AFPPremium
WannaCry digital extortion attack crippled hundreds of thousands computers worldwide. Photo: AFP

New York: It’s now clear that cyber attacks are a fact of life for corporations and governments. What’s less clear are the winners and losers among companies focused on stopping the digital break-ins.

News about the WannaCry digital extortion attack that crippled hundreds of thousands computers worldwide caused predictable stock market euphoria on Monday. As tends to happen when there is a highly public cyber attack, share prices of cyber security technology specialists such as Palo Alto Networks, Proofpoint and Fortinet climbed.

Many prominent digital attacks—such as those on Target, J.P. Morgan Chase and Sony’s movie studio—lift hopes of ringing cash registers at tech companies that make money from companies’ fear they’ll be the next victim. But even as computer attacks become more prevalent and damaging, they haven’t been a universal triumph for the cyber security industry.

It is true that corporate executives, boards of directors and governments are taking digital threats seriously . Research firm IDC expects spending on information-technology security to increase 8.7% each year through 2020 to nearly $105 billion, nearly three times the forecasted growth rate of all corporate and government technology spending. In a recent Morgan Stanley survey of big company information technology executives, digital security software was cited as the top 2017 spending priority by the second-highest number of respondents, trailing cloud computing technology.

But there are no sure bets in the cyber world. Securing companies from computer intrusions is growing more competitive. A glut of options from old-guard tech companies such as Cisco and from money-rich Silicon Valley start-ups is making it harder for all cybersecurity technology to stand out to prospective customers. The industry didn’t do itself any favours, either. It has grown difficult to tell which companies are selling effective security safeguards and which ones are overpromising.

As a result, valuations of many onetime cyber security highfliers have come back from the stratosphere as investors started to rethink their indiscriminate bets. The First Trust Nasdaq cybersecurity ETF, composed of companies such as Cisco, Palo Alto Networks and Check Point Software, has underperformed the S&P 500 stock index. The security ETF has risen 11% since its inception two years ago while the S&P 500 has climbed 15% over the same period.

It’s understandable for fretful companies to hunt for technology silver bullets to protect themselves from digital bad guys. But companies’ fear of hackers doesn’t erase the insecurity for the cyber security business. Bloomberg

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Published: 16 May 2017, 09:58 AM IST
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