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Cybersecurity: Threats and Defences
8MAY

Google closes $32bn Wiz deal; 38 M&A

3 min read
10:57UTC

Google-Wiz is the largest pure-cybersecurity deal of the post-CrowdStrike era. SecurityWeek counted 38 cyber M&A deals in March and 42 in February.

TechnologyAssessed
Key takeaway

The 80-deal-a-quarter M&A pace tracks where buyers expect the next defensive stack to sit.

Google completed its $32 billion acquisition of cloud security vendor Wiz in March 2026, closing the largest pure-cybersecurity deal of the post-CrowdStrike-Humio era 1. Wiz is a cloud-infrastructure risk platform founded in 2020; its product scans customer estates on Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud for misconfiguration, exposed credentials and lateral-movement paths. Inside Google Cloud, the platform becomes the native security layer fronting every workload the hyperscaler hosts.

SecurityWeek's deal tracker counted 38 cybersecurity mergers and acquisitions announced in March 2026, on top of 42 in February. Databricks, the US data and AI platform, acquired Antimatter and SiftD.ai to launch its Lakewatch Security Information and Event Management (SIEM) product. OpenAI acquired Promptfoo to fold prompt-injection defence into its Frontier platform. Prompt injection is the attack class where malicious instructions embedded in user input hijack a large-language-model application; Promptfoo's tooling is aimed at catching it in production.

The pace matters because consolidation sequences tell you what buyers think the next defensive stack looks like. Cloud security, SIEM re-platforming on AI-native data stores, and large-language-model application security are the three categories absorbing capital. Cloud security is where the Handala-style MDM and Entra ID attack surface lives; SIEM re-platforming is an answer to the 393-day BRICKSTORM dwell problem at detection speed; LLM application security is a new surface that did not exist at the scale it does now three years ago. The money is going where the offensive tradecraft in this briefing is also heading.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Google completed its $32 billion purchase of Wiz, a cloud security company, in March 2026. This is the largest acquisition of a purely cybersecurity company in history. Wiz makes software that helps businesses find security vulnerabilities in the cloud systems they use, like AWS or Azure or Google Cloud itself. Separately, there were 38 cybersecurity company acquisitions in March alone, continuing a trend of rapid consolidation in the security industry. Databricks bought two companies to build a security monitoring product, and OpenAI bought a company that specialises in defending against attacks on AI systems. This wave of acquisitions reflects the belief that cybersecurity spending is accelerating as threats increase, and that large technology companies want to own more of the security market rather than leave it to specialised vendors.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The M&A acceleration in cybersecurity reflects two converging structural pressures. Enterprise buyers are consolidating security vendors to reduce the integration overhead of operating 30-50 point products across their stack; they are purchasing platforms from vendors they already trust with their cloud infrastructure, which channels deal flow toward the hyperscalers.

For Google, the Wiz acquisition addresses a specific competitive gap: Google Cloud holds roughly 11% of the cloud infrastructure market against AWS at 33% and Azure at 22%, and lacks a native cloud security posture management offering comparable to Microsoft Defender for Cloud. The $32bn price is partly for Wiz's technology and partly for Wiz's multi-cloud customer relationships, which give Google a security wedge into AWS and Azure environments.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Google Cloud's bundling of Wiz's cloud-native application protection platform into Google Cloud Security will put competitive pressure on multi-cloud CNAPP vendors and accelerate enterprise consolidation of cloud security tooling with their primary cloud provider.

  • Risk

    The concentration of cloud security monitoring within the same vendors that operate cloud infrastructure creates a conflict-of-interest dynamic that independent security advisers and regulators are beginning to scrutinise as a systemic risk.

First Reported In

Update #1 · Stryker MDM wipe exposes identity perimeter

Google Cloud / Mandiant· 17 Apr 2026
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