CrowdStrike (CRWD) stock is moving lower today, but the story is a bit more mechanical than a typical selloff.
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A 4-for-1 stock split has taken effect, cutting the nominal share price to one quarter of its pre-split level. That alone explains most of the price drop in dollar terms.
Before the split, CRWD was trading around $772.46, near its 52-week high of $786. The stock had gained roughly 56% over the past year and was up about 62.80% year-to-date.
The split itself doesn’t change the company’s value. Each holder now has four times the number of shares, each worth one quarter of the original price. Total position value stays the same.
That said, some traders are using the event as a moment to take profits. CrowdStrike has been on a strong run, and stock splits can act as a psychological trigger for selling.
There’s another factor cooling sentiment today. New SEC filings show CEO George Kurtz sold approximately $1.95 million in CRWD stock at the end of June.
The sales took place on June 29 and June 30, 2026. Kurtz sold a total of 2,577 shares at prices ranging from $706.81 to $754.85 per share.
The transactions were executed under a 10b5-1 trading plan, which Kurtz adopted on January 6, 2026. These plans are set up in advance and are designed to remove any suggestion of insider trading.
Following the sales, Kurtz directly holds 2,078,256 Class A shares. That number includes shares tied to unvested restricted stock units.
He also indirectly holds 100,000 shares through the Kurtz Family Dynasty Trust, though he disclaims beneficial ownership of those beyond his pecuniary interest.
The $1.95 million sale is a small fraction of his overall position. It’s routine for executives at this level to periodically sell under pre-set plans.
On the business side, CrowdStrike recently reported quarterly revenue that came in 1.7% above consensus estimates. That was an improvement after a miss in Q1 of fiscal 2026.
Cantor Fitzgerald kept its Overweight rating on CRWD following those results, with a price target of $725.
The company has been pushing deeper into AI security. It recently expanded Falcon AI Detection and Response capabilities to cover applications built on Amazon Web Services, including Amazon Bedrock.
CrowdStrike also broadened its Project QuiltWorks partnership with AWS to monitor AI workloads for vulnerabilities. Separately, it extended integrations with Databricks, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Azure.
The company also launched an identity security feature for AI agents, enabling real-time authorization of agent actions. CrowdStrike’s current market cap stands at approximately $194.3 billion.
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