CrowdStrike Holdings Inc.: 10-K Risk Factor Changes

2024 vs 2023  ·  SEC EDGAR  ·  2026-05-22
Other years: 2026 vs 2025 · 2025 vs 2024
⚠ AI-Generated

The summary below was generated by an AI language model and may contain errors or omissions. All other content on this page is deterministically extracted from the original SEC EDGAR filing.

CrowdStrike removed its COVID-19 pandemic risk disclosure while adding three new risk categories focused on artificial intelligence liability, anti-corruption compliance, and environmental, social, and governance (ESG) expectations. The company substantively modified five risk disclosures, including those addressing operational volatility, international tax obligations, and historical profitability challenges, reflecting evolving business priorities and regulatory landscape shifts. The 51 unchanged risks indicate stability in CrowdStrike's core operational and market-related risk exposures.

✓ Deterministic extraction — no AI-generated data

Classification is based on semantic text similarity scoring and may include approximations. “No match” means no high-confidence textual match was found — not necessarily that a section was removed.

3
New Risks
1
Removed
5
Modified
51
Unchanged
🟢 New in Current Filing We are subject to anti-corruption, anti-bribery and similar laws, and non-compliance with such laws can subject us to criminal penalties or significant fines and harm our business and reputation. 🔒
🟢 New in Current Filing We utilize Artificial Intelligence, which could expose us to liability or adversely affect our business. 🔒
🟢 New in Current Filing Expectations of our performance relating to environmental, social and governance factors may impose additional costs and expose us to new risks. 🔒
🔴 No Match in Current Filing Public health crises, such as the COVID-19 pandemic could adversely affect our business, operating results and future revenue. 🔒
🟡 Modified Our results of operations may fluctuate significantly, which could make our future results difficult to predict and could cause our results of operations to fall below expectations. 🔒
🟡 Modified Our corporate structure and intercompany arrangements are subject to the tax laws of various jurisdictions, and we could be obligated to pay additional taxes, which would harm our results of operations. 🔒
🟡 Modified We have a history of losses, and while we have achieved profitability in quarterly periods, we may not be able to achieve or sustain profitability in the future. 🔒
🟡 Modified Our business is subject to the risks of catastrophic events, including, but not limited to, natural events such as earthquakes, fire, floods, and the outbreak of diseases, as well as man-made problems such as power disruptions, computer viruses or data security breaches. 🔒
🟡 Modified We are subject to governmental export controls and economic sanctions laws that could impair our ability to compete in international markets and subject us to liability if we are not in full compliance with applicable laws. 🔒
9 changes in this historical filing

Historical year-over-year comparisons (2024 vs 2023 and earlier) are available on the Pro plan.

Get full access — from $29/month Already a Pro subscriber? View full diff →