Cybersecurity Capital Markets in 2026:
AI, Services, and the Next Wave of M&A

Cybersecurity Capital Markets in 2026 AI, Services, and the Next Wave of M&A ​

I recently sat down with Rob Wright of Dark Reading to discuss the state of cybersecurity capital markets in 2026 and the trends shaping deal activity across the sector.

The conversation comes at a pivotal moment for the cybersecurity market. After a record setting 2025, dealmaking has not slowed. In fact, based on the first several months of 2026, cybersecurity M&A activity is on pace to surpass last year’s record volume.

At Momentum Cyber, we are seeing a market defined by AI, services demand, financing concentration, and a widening gap between platform-aligned companies and the rest of the market.

AI Is Reshaping the Market, But Not Replacing Services

AI is influencing how investors allocate capital, how buyers evaluate strategic fit, and how companies position themselves for premium outcomes. At the same time, AI is not replacing cybersecurity services. It is accelerating demand for them.

As threat actors use AI to automate attacks and scale campaigns, enterprises are leaning more heavily on consultants, MSSPs, MDR providers, and incident response teams. Leading services firms are embedding AI into threat detection, SOC automation, and incident response to improve efficiency and scale.

That combination is driving significant M&A activity across Cybersecurity Services. The market remains fragmented, investor demand is strong from both PE and Strategics, and enterprises continue to spend twice as much on cybersecurity services as they do on products. While lots of the conversations in cybersecurity today are focused on AI software, human-led services are helping drive what is shaping up to be another record year for cybersecurity M&A.

Momentum Cyber has had a front-row seat to this evolution, including representing Eric Foster and TENEX on its $250M Series B financing led by Crosspoint Capital, the second largest Series B in cybersecurity history.

Key Trends We Are Seeing

AI is enhancing SOC labor. Security Services led M&A volume in Q1 with 44 deals, while AI Security led all segments in disclosed M&A value with $916M across just 12 deals. With five additional AI Security M&A deals in April, the category has officially entered the M&A arena.

Hyperscaler gravity is reshaping M&A. The Mythos announcement by Anthropic was a major signal. However, as new models are deployed and governance, trust, and security
concerns expand, we expect more inorganic activity from frontier AI companies and the hyperscaler universe.

Security spend is competing, not disappearing. Cybersecurity financing outpaced M&A value in Q1, with $3.8B in financing compared to $2.6B in M&A. This was only the fourth time since 2018 that financing dollars exceeded M&A dollars. AI security captured 46% of all VC dollars deployed in the quarter, totaling $1.7B.

AI economics are now a diligence variable. Investors and buyers are increasingly focused on whether AI improves scale, efficiency, margins, and outcomes. The financing-over-M&A dynamic suggests capital is concentrating around vendors investors believe can win on AI economics.

Early 2026 Market Snapshot

Q1 2026 was the second most active cybersecurity M&A quarter on record, with 108 transactions, behind only Q2 2025’s 110. Based on the first four months of the year, cybersecurity is on pace for roughly 450 M&A deals in 2026, which would surpass the 2025 record of 400.

The financing market is also becoming more concentrated. Q1 saw 10 rounds of $100M or more, worth a combined $1.8B, compared to a 2025 quarterly average of six such rounds worth $1.5B. The median check size for $100M+ rounds rose to $200M, with a median valuation of $1.85B.

That capital is flowing toward scaled platforms and proven entrepreneurs at AI-native companies. Recent examples include Eric Foster, formerly of Cyderes, raising a $250M Series B for TENEX; Lior Div, formerly of Cybereason, raising a $130M Series A for 7AI; and Galina Atova, formerly of Claroty, raising a $125M Series A for Kai. Together, these financings reflect a broader shift toward backing experienced cybersecurity founders with a clear path to category leadership.

AI Security is also maturing quickly. The category saw 12 M&A deals in Q1and 5 more in April compared to 10 in all of 2025. The buying window has officially opened.

What Comes Next?

The market is doing what our Almanac from January anticipated: capital is concentrating in platform-aligned, AI-native companies, strategics are still commanding value, and private equity is rebounding in volume. For founders, investors, and buyers, 2026 is shaping up to be another defining year for the sector.

Author

Picture of Eric McAlpine

Eric McAlpine

Founder & CEO, Managing Partner

Eric McAlpine has spent the last 28 years in the Technology industry as a strategic advisor to Boards, Founders & CEOs, a two-time founder, and award-winning engineer. He is a highly sought out speaker on the Cybersecurity market at major industry conferences, private events, and corporate gatherings sharing insights into M&A, capital markets, and industry trends.

Eric is the Founder & CEO at Momentum Cyber, the premier trusted strategic advisor to the Cybersecurity industry providing bespoke high-impact advice combined with tailored senior-level access.  He is one of the top dealmakers in the Cybersecurity industry with a prolific M&A track record advising on and orchestrating deals across the industry.

About Momentum Cyber

Momentum Cyber is the premier trusted advisor to the global cybersecurity industry, providing M&A advisory, capital raising, and strategic research services. With 68 cybersecurity transactions completed, $25B+ in cybersecurity deal value, and unparalleled industry relationships, Momentum Cyber delivers mission-critical advice to leading founders, CEOs, and decision-makers.

By The Numbers

M&A Highlights

Deal Volume & Value

Top Acquirers

Most Active Sectors

Financing Highlights

Capital Deployment

Stage Distribution

Top Financed Companies

Most Active Sectors by Deal Count

Strategic Market Insights

AI Security Consolidation Arrives

February 2026 marks an inflection point for AI Security M&A. With 4 transactions in a single month, the segment is experiencing the buying window that operators and investors have anticipated since enterprise AI adoption accelerated in 2024-2025.

Key AI Security Transactions

The market is recognizing that AI security is no longer speculative. Enterprises are deploying autonomous agents, and acquirers who move early are securing critical capabilities at reasonable valuations before premium pricing takes hold.

Capital Concentrates at Scale

February financing activity reinforced the flight-to-quality dynamic. Five deals accounted for 45% of total capital deployed, while median deal sizes compressed to $12M as early-stage volume balanced late-stage concentration.

$100M+ Financing Activity Accelerates

This bifurcation reflects investor conviction that scaled platforms with demonstrated efficiency can command premium capital, while earlier-stage companies face more disciplined funding environments.

Record M&A Momentum Continues

February’s 37 M&A transactions extend the elevated deal velocity observed throughout 2025 and into early 2026. The first two months of 2026 are on pace for 489 total M&A deals, which would represent 22%+ growth over 2025’s record 400 transactions.

Historical Context

Strategic buyers are driving this acceleration. With stronger enterprise budgets, platform consolidation imperatives, and the urgency to own AI-enabled security infrastructure, acquirers are moving decisively on targets that extend their capabilities or fill critical gaps.