NEW YORK — The S&P 500 opened at 7,511.79 on Wednesday morning, but the broader tape was quickly secondary to a pair of single-stock implosions that set the tone for the first hour of trading.

📊 Trader’s Take
My read on this is simple: the market is punishing Zscaler not for what it did, but for what it implied. A guidance miss measured in fractions of a million dollars does not explain a $40 drop on a $185 stock — valuation multiples do. I’m watching the $145 level closely; a failure to hold it before noon signals that momentum sellers are still in control and discretionary dip-buyers have stepped back. The real question here is whether the full-year guidance raise — which beat consensus — gets any credit at all, or whether the Street has decided this quarter’s Q4 whisper number was the only one that mattered. Contrarian thought: Zscaler’s underlying beat was clean. Watch this — if ZS reclaims $155 intraday, Evercore’s new target becomes the floor, not the ceiling.

The Nasdaq Composite opened at 26,590.50, essentially flat against Tuesday’s close of roughly 26,280 adjusted for the prior day’s 1.19% gain. Six of 11 S&P sectors opened in positive territory, with technology, industrials, and materials leading. The VanEck Semiconductor ETF added 0.90% at the open, a data point that matters for context: the chip sector is not the problem this morning. The problem is guidance math.

What the Broader Tape Is Actually Saying

Tuesday’s session left a clear signal: the Dow’s 0.23% decline was the outlier, not the trend. The S&P 500’s 0.61% gain and the Nasdaq’s 1.19% advance reflected a market still willing to buy technology exposure heading into earnings season’s tail. Wednesday’s open at 7,511.79 on the S&P — within a session range of 7,501.10 to 7,539.09 — suggests the index has not broken stride despite the noise around individual names.

The semiconductor complex deserves particular attention here. As we examined earlier this week, the question was always whether chip-sector momentum had enough breadth to absorb idiosyncratic software disappointments. So far Wednesday morning, the answer appears to be yes — but the session is young.

Macro underpinnings remain constructive. Oil’s recent decline has reduced input-cost pressure across industrials and consumer names, and the durable goods data from earlier this week gave the bulls a legitimate fundamental anchor. Whether that anchor holds through a session dominated by headline-driven selling in two significant names is the operative question before 11 AM ET.

Data Visual
Zscaler Q3 FY2026: Reported vs. Consensus Estimates
Shows how Zscaler’s Q3 revenue and EPS beat consensus while Q4 guidance fell short — the gap that triggered Wednesday’s selloff.
Zscaler Q3 FY2026: Reported vs. Consensus Estimates
Values in $

Opening Bell Standout — Zscaler: When a Beat Is Not Enough

Zscaler opened near $145.60, down roughly 21% from Tuesday’s close of $184.60, after third-quarter results that objectively beat on every headline metric. Revenue of $850.48 million cleared the $835.38 million consensus. Adjusted EPS of $1.08 topped the $1.01 estimate. Full-year revenue guidance was raised to $3.3295–$3.3325 billion against a $3.32 billion consensus, and full-year adjusted EPS guidance was lifted to $4.10–$4.11 from the prior $3.99–$4.02 range.

None of that mattered. The market focused entirely on Q4 revenue guidance of $875–$878 million against a consensus of $878.53 million — a midpoint miss of approximately $2 million on a business generating nearly $850 million per quarter. In any normal analytical framework, that delta is noise. In a market where high-multiple software names are priced for acceleration, it reads as deceleration.

Key Stat
$2.03M
The midpoint gap between Zscaler’s Q4 guidance and consensus — the number that erased roughly $6 billion in market cap at Wednesday’s open.

Three analyst firms moved quickly. Evercore ISI’s Peter Levine downgraded the stock from Outperform to In-Line, cutting his price target from $225 to $155. TD Cowen’s Shaul Eyal lowered his target to $180 from $220 while keeping a Buy rating. Baird’s Shrenik Kothari maintained Outperform but reduced his target from $265 to $230.

Analyst Note
Baird’s Shrenik Kothari maintained his Outperform rating on Zscaler while cutting his price target 13% from $265 to $230, arguing the underlying demand environment remains intact. TD Cowen’s Shaul Eyal, keeping his Buy, noted the target reduction to $180 from $220 reflects the Q4 guide, not a change in the long-term thesis. The divergence between Evercore’s downgrade and Baird’s hold tells you this is a valuation debate, not a business debate.

The Evercore downgrade to In-Line is the one that institutional desks will weigh most heavily. A downgrade — not merely a target cut — triggers automatic selling from funds that screen on consensus rating thresholds. That mechanical selling pressure is likely amplifying the move beyond what the fundamental data justifies. The contrarian case is straightforward: if the full-year EPS raise to $4.10–$4.11 reflects genuine operating leverage, the Q4 revenue guide is conservative framing, not structural deterioration. Markets, of course, rarely reward that argument on the morning of a disappointment.

Data Visual
Analyst Price Targets on Zscaler After Q3 Earnings
Illustrates the range of revised price targets from major analyst firms following Wednesday morning’s guidance-driven selloff.
Analyst Price Targets on Zscaler After Q3 Earnings
Values in $

Verra Mobility and the Contract Risk Nobody Priced

Verra Mobility’s situation is structurally different from Zscaler’s and arguably more instructive for risk managers. The company closed Tuesday at $13.08, already down 3% on the session, before after-hours disclosure of a termination notice from Avis Budget Group sent shares to $7.70 in premarket trading — a 41.2% collapse.

The financial impact is severe and specific: the Avis contract accounts for $135–$145 million in annualized Commercial Services revenue and $120–$125 million in segment profit. The termination is effective September 2026. Verra Mobility’s revised 2026 outlook now calls for revenue of $985–$995 million and adjusted EBITDA of $380–$385 million, with free cash flow of $140–$150 million and adjusted EPS of $1.19–$1.25.

Deutsche Bank downgraded VRRM to Hold from Buy, cutting its target to $9 from $22. Baird moved to Neutral from Outperform with an $8 target. Both targets imply the stock is near fair value at current levels — which suggests the opening price around $7.70 may not attract aggressive buying. A single-customer concentration risk of this magnitude rarely fully reprices in one session; secondary selling from disappointed long holders tends to extend for days.

The more uncomfortable read: Verra Mobility’s Tuesday close was already pricing some stress — a 3% decline on a flat-to-up tape. Whether that reflected informed positioning or coincidence, the pattern should remind traders that contract-concentration risk in mid-cap industrials and services companies rarely announces itself cleanly before the disclosure hits.

For broader context on how geopolitical and macro crosscurrents are affecting the industrial and mobility sector, the Iran ceasefire situation continues to cast a shadow over logistics-adjacent names dependent on fleet utilization cycles.

The Level That Decides the First Hour

For the S&P 500, the session range of 7,501.10 to 7,539.09 provides the immediate framework. A hold above 7,501 — the session low — through the first hour suggests the index is absorbing the single-stock damage without contagion. A break below 7,500 would be the first meaningful test of whether the technology bid that drove Tuesday’s gains was durable or merely momentum-driven.

The Nasdaq’s range of 26,520.30 to 26,725.29 is wider and reflects greater intraday volatility in growth names. The lower bound near 26,520 is the level to watch: a sustained trade below it before noon ET would indicate that Zscaler’s decline is pulling broader software names lower in sympathy, which would shift the session’s character from isolated earnings reaction to sector repricing.

For ZS specifically, $145 is the first structural level. Below it, the next meaningful support cluster sits near the Evercore target of $155 — already breached at open — making the $140–$145 zone the real test for whether value buyers step in or momentum sellers retain control. A recovery above $155 before the close would represent a significant technical reversal and would materially change the near-term narrative. The rate environment remains supportive for growth equities broadly, which makes the case for a ZS intraday recovery stronger than the open suggests — but not guaranteed.

Soligenix (SNGX) deserves a brief mention on the upside: the small-cap biotech was up more than 112% in premarket after announcing its ThermoVax platform’s applicability to Bundibugyo virus vaccine development amid the Congo outbreak. Moves of this magnitude in sub-dollar stocks rarely sustain, and volume-to-float dynamics typically mean the opening surge fades by mid-session. It is not a tradeable signal for the broader tape.

What to Watch Before 11 AM ET

The first hour’s price action will tell traders whether Wednesday is a session defined by two idiosyncratic blow-ups or the beginning of a broader reassessment of software valuations heading into the summer. The evidence, as of the open, favors the former — but the Nasdaq’s ability to hold 26,520 is the real-time arbiter.

Level / Event Value Signal
S&P 500 session low 7,501.10 Hold above = contained damage; break below flags broader tech contagion
Nasdaq Composite support 26,520.30 Sustained trade below before noon = software sector repricing, not isolated ZS event
Zscaler first support $145.00 Open price zone; failure to hold signals momentum sellers still dominant
Zscaler intraday recovery level $155.00 Reclaim of Evercore’s new target = value buyers stepping in, narrative shifts
Verra Mobility fair value zone $8.00–$9.00 Deutsche Bank and Baird targets; trade below $8 signals further capitulation

Two single-stock blow-ups do not make a trend. The S&P 500 at 7,511.79 and a semiconductor ETF adding 0.90% tell a different story from the one ZS and VRRM are writing. The session’s real verdict will come from how the Nasdaq handles 26,520 and whether Zscaler’s opening level of $145 draws buyers or accelerates the exit. Until one of those levels breaks with conviction, the broader tape’s bid remains intact — conditional, but intact.


This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

James Whitfield is our pre-market analyst at PreMarket Daily, covering U.S. equity futures, overnight movers, earnings releases, and the macro catalysts that set the tone before the 9:30 AM ET open. James...