In a Wednesday interview with CNBC's Jim Cramer , CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz indicated the cybersecurity outfit is confident in its finances as it faces a government inquiry about information related to a massive outage last year, along with deals and other matters.
"Someone asks a question, we're going to cooperate. It's an inquiry, and we'll give them the answers they need, and...we'll go from there," Kurtz said. "We stand by the accounting of those transactions."
Last July, CrowdStrike suffered a major IT outage that disrupted businesses around the world, including airlines, hospitals and financial services firms. CrowdStrike attributed the issues to a faulty software update, "not a security incident or cyberattack," Kurtz said at the time.
Crowdstrike released its