Almost everyone wrote Zoom off a few years back. The story was tidy: the app everyone loved before 2022, but then almost a COVID one-hit-wonder that peaked in 2021 after going from $1B to $4B in ARR in one year.  That would slowly bleed out as people went back to the office and Teams ate some of its lunch.  To some extent, that all became true.

But … Zoom is back to growth.  Modest growth, mature growth, enterprise-driven growth.  But growth.  Zoom’s Q1 FY2027 (ended April 30, 2026) came in with revenue re-accelerating, AI that customers are actually paying for, and free cash flow margins north of 40%. It’s a mature B2B leader clawing growth back while becoming a cash machine, which is rarer and more repeatable than another hypergrowth story.

Zoom Q1 FY2027: By the Numbers

  • Revenue: $1.239B in the quarter (Q1 FY2027, ended April 30, 2026), up 5.5% YoY and above guidance
  • Revenue run-rate (≈ARR): ~$5B, with FY27 guidance of ~$5.08B
  • Market cap: ~$27B (July 2026, ~$91/share)
  • Revenue multiple: ~5.4x run-rate, and closer to ~4x after netting out $7.7B in cash and investments
  • Non-GAAP operating margin: 41.1%
  • Free cash flow: $500M in the quarter, a 40.4% FCF margin
  • Rule of 40: ~46
  • Enterprise net revenue retention: 99%, with Enterprise now 61% of revenue and growing 7.2%
  • Cash + marketable securities: $7.7B
  • Anthropic stake: carried at $1.27B, potentially worth $2B to $4B
  • Stock up 21% this year

Here are 5 Interesting Learnings.

1. Growth Is Re-Accelerating, Albeit Very Modestly, At ~$5 Billion in Revenue.

Revenue hit $1.239B in the quarter, up 5.5% year-over-year, above the high end of guidance. That doesn’t sound dramatic until you remember the trajectory. Zoom fell to roughly 3% growth. Now growth has climbed for multiple quarters, and full-year FY26 growth accelerated 130 basis points to 4.4%.

At scale, growth doesn’t die, it plateaus. And a plateau can be climbed back out of if you attach genuinely new products to a big installed base. The install base is the asset. The second and third products are the growth.

 

2. They’re Actually Monetizing AI. And It’s Working (To An Extent)

AI Companion paid users grew 184% year-over-year. “My Notes” reached 1.5 million licensed users within four months of launch. Customer Experience is growing at high double digits, and paid AI showed up in every one of Zoom’s top 10 CX deals last quarter. Zoom built AI into paid SKUs, and customers are buying them. Charging for it instead of giving it away is a completely different financial outcome.

Shipping the most AI doesn’t always win in B2B + AI. Figuring out the paid SKU and the attach motion does. Shipping AI is table stakes now. Charging for it, and getting customers to say yes, is the actual skill.

3. Enterprise Passed Online. And Carries the Whole Company Now.

Enterprise revenue was $755.7M, up 7.2%, and now makes up 61% of total revenue. Online (self-serve) revenue was $483.3M, up just 2.8%.  Not a new trend, but one that keep accelerating.

What drove Zoom’s original explosion: self-serve SMB, millions of people swiping a credit card during COVID. That base is now the slow-growth anchor, growing at a third of the enterprise rate. The direct, sales-led enterprise motion is the engine keeping the whole thing moving.

Self-serve got Zoom to massive scale but couldn’t sustain the growth on its own. The durable growth came from moving upmarket. If your self-serve base is decelerating, the fix is usually enterprise and multi-product, not simply pouring more into the top of the self-serve funnel.

4. Net Revenue Retention Is Still Below 100%. And They’re Growing Anyway. But It Does “Hurt”

Enterprise net dollar expansion ticked up to 99%, from 98% a year ago. Still under 100%. And Online average monthly churn actually got worse, rising to 3.0% from 2.8%. Meanwhile $100k+ customers grew 8.2% to 4,534.

The growth is being driven by new logos and new product attach, not by the existing base expanding on its own.

You don’t strictly need 120% NDR to grow. You can grow with sub-100% retention if you add enough new customers and attach enough new products on top. But it’s much harder, and it’s lower-quality growth. Most great B2B companies would kill for Zoom’s cash flow. Zoom, in turn, would love to get its NDR back well over 100%.

5. It Became a Cash Machine. And Capital Return Is the Story Now.

The profitability here is almost hard to believe for a company still growing. Non-GAAP operating margin was 41.1%. Free cash flow was $500.5M in a single quarter, a 40.4% FCF margin. Zoom is sitting on $7.7B in cash and marketable securities.

And they’re returning it. The board added another $1.0B to the buyback authorization on top of the $625M already remaining, after retiring roughly 20.4 million shares over FY26. Run the Rule of 40 math: ~5.5% growth plus ~40% FCF margin lands you around 46, with the profit side doing almost all the lifting.

The takeaway: at maturity, the game shifts from growth to durable profit and capital return. Zoom is a Rule-of-46 company where the “40” carries it. That’s not a failure state. For a company its size, it’s a valuable end state, and one a lot of today’s high-burn AI companies will need to grow into eventually.

Bonus Learning: The Anthropic Stake May Be Worth More Than the Market Gives Zoom Credit For

This is the part of the quarter that has nothing to do with meetings, phone, or CX, and it might matter as much as any of it.

Zoom booked a $152M gain on strategic investments this quarter, versus a $14M loss a year ago. Almost all of it traces to one position: Anthropic. In May 2023, Zoom Ventures put roughly $51M into Anthropic as part of a deal to bring Claude into Zoom’s products. Three years later that stake is carried on the balance sheet at $1.27B, based on Anthropic’s February 2026 round at a $380B valuation. Zoom even added a $46M follow-on this quarter to protect its position against dilution.

An initial ~$51M bet now carried above $1.25B is roughly a 25x return, on a corporate balance sheet, in under three years. Anthropic is now about two-thirds of Zoom’s entire $1.876B strategic investment book. And it may be marked conservatively: the $1.27B reflects the $380B round, while Anthropic has reportedly been in talks to raise at a far higher valuation. Baird has estimated the stake could be worth $2B to $4B depending on dilution.

Now put that against the operating company. Zoom’s market cap is around $27B. It holds $7.7B in cash and marketable securities, plus the Anthropic stake carried at $1.27B and possibly worth $2B to $4B. Strip out the cash and the stake, and public investors are paying somewhere around $16B to $18B for a business generating ~$5B in revenue, ~$2B in non-GAAP operating income, and ~$1.7B in free cash flow. That’s a high-single to low-double-digit multiple of free cash flow for a profitable, re-accelerating B2B leader. The cash and the Anthropic position act as a floor under the stock.

There’s a strategic layer on top of the financial one. The stake buys Zoom deep access to Claude inside its federated AI approach, where it routes tasks to different models based on cost and performance. Without an ownership position, Zoom would be renting frontier AI at retail from a partner of a direct competitor, and the 40% free cash flow margins in Learning #5 would be a lot harder to defend. The investment protects the growth story and the margin story at the same time.

Three cautions worth stating plainly, because they’re the difference between paper and value:

  • It’s a mark, not money. The $1.27B is a carrying value, not cash. Zoom can’t spend it without a sale or secondary, and the gain reverses in a down round.
  • It’s concentrated and illiquid. One private company is two-thirds of the strategic book. That’s real single-name risk sitting on the balance sheet.
  • It distorts GAAP earnings. The $152M Anthropic mark was about 36% of Zoom’s $425.7M GAAP net income this quarter. Non-GAAP net income of $465M strips it out, which is the number to read if you want to see the operating business.

The founder takeaway: a single early, high-conviction strategic investment can create more shareholder value than years of operating execution, and can reprice how the market sees an entire company. Zoom’s operating business grew 5.5% last quarter. Its Anthropic stake is up roughly 25x. One of those shows up in cash flow. The other is a paper mark the market is still learning how to price.

And 4 That Just Missed the Cut

  • Dilution is actually shrinking. Stock-based comp fell to $179M from $202M year-over-year, and diluted share count dropped to 300.2M from 312.8M. Real dilution discipline, which is rare in B2B and rarer still in anything AI-adjacent.
  • GAAP margins are catching up to non-GAAP. GAAP operating margin jumped 450 basis points to 25.1%. As SBC comes down, the gap between “real” and “adjusted” profit keeps closing.
  • They raised guidance on the beat. FY27 revenue guidance moved up to $5.080B to $5.090B, with non-GAAP EPS of $5.96 to $6.00. This wasn’t a beat-and-hold, it was a beat-and-raise.
  • AI compute isn’t crushing gross margin. Cost of revenue actually fell year-over-year even as revenue grew, pushing gross margin to ~77.9% from ~76.3%. The bear case that AI features would eat margins hasn’t shown up in the numbers yet.

Why This “Boring” Quarter Is Worth Your Time

Zoom will never headline a 5IL for hypergrowth. But the lesson here is more durable than another 60%-grower story. A company can get written off, re-accelerate through multi-product attach, actually charge for AI while everyone else gives it away, and compound cash the entire time. Growth plus durable profitability is not something you win once. The best B2B companies keep re-earning it, quarter after quarter.

Related Posts

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This