Charles Lacey Compton III, the chief executive officer of Fastly, Inc. (NASDAQ:FSLY), executed multiple sales of the company’s Class A common stock totaling $720,312 on April 16 and 17, 2026. The sales were transacted at prices ranging from $23.69 to $25.40 per share.
On April 16, Mr. Compton sold 11,042 shares at $25.00 apiece. Later the same day he sold 11,432 shares at $23.69 per share; the company noted that this latter disposal was carried out to satisfy tax obligations connected to the vesting of previously granted restricted stock units.
Additional disposals followed on April 17. Mr. Compton sold 6,659 shares in multiple transactions at prices that ranged from $24.06 to $24.94, yielding a weighted average price of $24.52 for that block. He also sold 400 shares at a weighted average price of $25.40, with transaction prices between $25.16 and $25.99.
All of the sales other than the tax-related disposition were executed under a Rule 10b5-1 trading plan that Mr. Compton adopted on August 27, 2025. After completing these trades, Mr. Compton directly holds 1,133,895 shares of Fastly Class A common stock.
The share activity comes amid a strong market run for Fastly: the stock has risen 356% over the last year. At the same time, InvestingPro analysis cited in company materials indicates the stock looks overvalued when compared to its Fair Value, placing Fastly among the more highly valued equities in the market.
Investors looking for further context were pointed to additional analysis from InvestingPro, which offers 10 further tips on Fastly and said more detailed coverage is available ahead of Fastly’s next earnings report, scheduled for May 6.
Alongside the insider sales and valuation commentary, Fastly has been the subject of several notable corporate and market developments. Brokerage and research moves have included a downgrade from Craig-Hallum, which shifted its rating on Fastly from Buy to Hold and assigned a price target of $24.00, citing improved pricing and an uptick in AI-related traffic. Conversely, Evercore ISI initiated coverage with an Outperform rating, arguing the company is moving toward higher-quality growth and potentially serving as infrastructure for AI-native applications, while assigning a $32.00 price target.
Operationally, Fastly announced a partnership with Spain’s LALIGA to build anti-piracy technology aimed at reducing illegal live-sports streaming; LALIGA estimates such piracy costs its clubs between $700 and $800 million annually. On the leadership front, Fastly appointed Joan Jenkins as chief marketing officer; the company reported she brings more than 20 years of experience at B2B technology firms.
Fastly has also made a change in its external auditing arrangements, selecting KPMG LLP as its independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2026, and dismissing Deloitte & Touche LLP.
Taken together, the insider sales, valuation assessment, analyst coverage shifts, partnership announcement, executive hire, and auditor change provide investors with a range of signals about the company’s trajectory and recent corporate activity. The sales themselves were a mix of predetermined-plan trades and a tax-driven sale associated with equity vesting.
Looking ahead: Fastly’s upcoming earnings release on May 6 is noted as a near-term date for investors to watch for additional operational and financial detail.