George Kurtz, who serves as president and chief executive officer of CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc., executed a sequence of stock sales totaling 4,400 shares of the company’s Class A common stock on April 17 and April 20, 2026. The aggregated proceeds from those disposals were approximately $2.13 million. The trades were carried out under a pre-planned 10b5-1 trading arrangement that Mr. Kurtz adopted on January 6, 2026.
The shares were disposed of at prices within a range of $418.32 to $433.15 per share. The reported figures reflect weighted average sale prices for transactions that occurred across different price points on the two specified dates. According to InvestingPro data, CrowdStrike’s share price has since moved to $449.61, representing a 9.35% increase over the prior week.
Post-sale holdings
After these sales, Mr. Kurtz retains direct ownership of 2,223,973 shares of Class A common stock. That total includes shares expected to be issued as restricted stock units vest. In addition to his direct holdings, Mr. Kurtz has an indirect interest in 100,000 shares held by the Kurtz Family Dynasty Trust; he disclaims beneficial ownership of those trust-held shares except to the extent of his pecuniary interest.
Valuation and market context
InvestingPro’s analysis, referenced in connection with the transactions, indicates that the stock is trading above its Fair Value. At the time of the data cited, CrowdStrike carried a market capitalization of $113.71 billion. The juxtaposition of the insider sale, the quoted overvaluation assessment, and the recent price appreciation to $449.61 is a factual snapshot of the company’s current market position.
Analyst coverage
Several brokerages have reaffirmed bullish stances on CrowdStrike in recent coverage. Cantor Fitzgerald maintained an Overweight rating with a $520.00 price target, noting that CrowdStrike is gaining traction in enterprise deals alongside Palo Alto Networks. Benchmark reiterated a Buy rating with a $500.00 price target and emphasized CrowdStrike’s role in AI adoption across business processes. Piper Sandler kept an Overweight rating and a $520.00 price target, noting AI opportunities discussed during meetings with company leadership. Stifel also reiterated a Buy rating with a $480.00 price target, expressing confidence in the company’s AI positioning and multi-year financial targets. Cantor Fitzgerald additionally reiterated an Overweight rating for Palo Alto Networks with a $220.00 price target, highlighting its continued enterprise success.
What the filings and commentary show
The transactions in question were executed pursuant to the pre-arranged 10b5-1 trading plan adopted on January 6, 2026, and the disclosed sale prices cover a specified range for trades on April 17 and April 20, 2026. Beyond the mechanics of the plan and the resulting changes in Mr. Kurtz’s reported holdings, the public materials cited also include analyst reiterations that underscore continued confidence in CrowdStrike’s strategic positioning, particularly around AI and enterprise security demand.
Limitations
The publicly disclosed items documented here are limited to the share counts, sale dates, sale price ranges, the date of adoption for the 10b5-1 plan, InvestingPro’s valuation commentary and market-cap figure, Mr. Kurtz’s direct and indirect holdings, and the listed analyst ratings and price targets. No additional claims or causal inferences are made beyond these reported facts.