S&P 500
Cybersecurity statistics about s&p 500
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51% of U.S.-based cybersecurity decision-makers reported that their boards are asking for foundational security metrics.
23% of UK consumers cite fraud detection and prevention as the most positive impact of AI in banking in 2025.
26% of organizations worldwide plan to increase their cybersecurity budgets by 25% or more in 2026.
33% of UK consumers have no trust at all in generative AI, while 50% report that it makes them anxious in 2025.
76% of leaders rated compliance pressures around data sovereignty as extremely or moderately important.
29% of global respondents ranked ransomware attacks and privacy breaches as their leading cyber concerns.
36% of U.S.-based cybersecurity decision-makers identified threat detection and response as one of their top cybersecurity priorities for 2026.
75% of organizations globally express high confidence in their overall cyber risk management strategies.
64% of organizations prioritize Managed Detection and Response (MDR) as a top area of time and financial investment.
70% of organizations experienced at least one material third-party cyber incident in the past year.
88% of IT leaders believe it will be extremely (50%) or moderately important (38%) in 2026 to ensure partners and suppliers meet their cybersecurity and data protection standards.
74% of UK organizations intend to increase their cybersecurity spending over the next 12 months.
97% of CISOs agree that hybrid infrastructure provides greater resilience and risk management capabilities than relying solely on cloud or on-premises environments.
53% of U.S.-based cybersecurity decision-makers manage and monitor cybersecurity infrastructure using a combination of managed and in-house services.
38.6% of enterprises have already deployed AI agents at department or enterprise scale.
65% of enterprises consider action-level guardrails and runtime controls to be a critical priority for AI agents.
38% of all accounts in global enterprises are dormant.
Inactive users hold 16.5% of total permissions in global enterprises.
Machine identities outnumber human users by a ratio of 17:1 in global enterprises.
Just 0.01% of non-human identities control 80% of all cloud permissions in global enterprises.