CrowdStrike Just Split Its Stock 4-for-1. Does a $193 Price Tag Make It a Buy?
The split leaves CrowdStrike’s market value unchanged while lowering the share price and adding three shares for each share held.
5 Articles
5 Articles
CrowdStrike Just Split Its Stock 4-for-1. Does a $193 Price Tag Make It a Buy?
Key PointsCrowdStrike's first-ever stock split took effect Thursday, taking shares from about $770 to about $193.Fiscal first-quarter revenue rose 26% year over year -- an acceleration from 23% growth in the prior quarter.The stock trades at more than 150 times management's adjusted earnings guidance for fiscal 2027.10 stocks we like better than CrowdStrike › At Wednesday's close, one share of CrowdStrike (NASDAQ: CRWD) cost $772.74. On Thursday…
Is CrowdStrike stock a buy after 75% drop?
The CrowdStrike (NASDAQ: CRWD) stock price chart might appear frightening at face value, given that, as of press time on July 2, it shows a staggering 74.69% decline from $763.14 to $193.18, but the move resulted from a deliberate action by the company. CrowdStrike stock price one-day chart. Source: Google Specifically, the fall in CRWD shares’ value that can be seen on many quotes available online came from the firm’s decision to execute a 4-fo…
CrowdStrike (CRWD) Shares Decline Following 4-for-1 Split and CEO's $1.95M Stock Sale
Key Takeaways A 4-for-1 stock split for CrowdStrike became effective, automatically adjusting the share price to 25% of its prior level. Chief Executive George Kurtz offloaded roughly $1.95 million worth of CRWD shares on June 29–30, 2026, through a prearranged 10b5-1 plan. The transactions involved 2,577 shares sold at prices spanning $706.81 to $754.85 apiece. Prior to the split adjustment, CRWD shares traded around $772.46, approaching the 5…
This $700 stock 'lost' 75% overnight, but here's why Wall Street isn't panicking
CrowdStrike stock (NASDAQ: CRWD) looked like it had fallen off a cliff on Thursday, with the stock moving from roughly $773 at Wednesday’s close to about $193 on split-adjusted screens.The scary-looking drop was not a selloff, but a company’s scheduled 4-for-1 stock split taking effect.Investors who held one share now hold four, each priced at roughly one-quarter of the old level.It means the total value of the position remains unchanged.CrowdSt…
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