Executive Suite Cashing Out
Palantir Technologies Inc. (PLTR) is experiencing one of its most substantial insider selling sprees in recent memory, according to SEC filings submitted Thursday. The data analytics company's top brass, including executives and board members, are preparing to offload shares valued at more than $250 million, raising eyebrows as the stock faces mounting pressure over its valuation.
Leading the exodus is CEO Alex Karp, who filed to sell 585,000 shares worth $95.93 million. This isn't exactly new territory for Karp. He previously sold $62.7 million worth of shares back in August. Before you think he's abandoning ship, though, the CEO still holds a significant stake valued at over $2 billion. So he's diversifying, not disappearing.
President and co-founder Stephen Cohen isn't far behind, planning to sell 405,000 shares worth $66.4 million. Cohen also made moves in August, selling more than $24.9 million in earlier transactions. The pattern here suggests these sales are part of planned strategies rather than panic moves.
CTO Shyam Sankar has filed to sell 225,000 shares valued at $36.89 million. Like his colleagues, Sankar has been regularly trimming his position, with a $12.1 million sale in August and several smaller transactions since then.
Meanwhile, CFO David Glazer and Chief Revenue Officer Ryan Taylor are each planning sales worth $3.8 million, following similar filings they made in September. The coordination is notable, though these amounts are considerably smaller than what the top executives are unloading.
| Executive | Shares To Be Sold | Estimated Value |
|---|---|---|
| Alex Karp (CEO) | 585,000 | $95.93M |
| Stephen Cohen (President, Co-founder) | 405,000 | $66.4M |
| Shyam Sankar (CTO) | 225,000 | $36.89M |
| David Glazer (CFO) | 23,290 | $3.82M |
| Ryan Taylor (CRO) | 23,290 | $3.82M |
Palantir did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the matter.
Valuation Reality Check
The timing of these sales is particularly interesting given the scrutiny Palantir is facing over its valuation. Despite posting strong third-quarter results earlier this month, the stock has been hammered. We're talking about a company trading at 381 times earnings and 107 times sales. Those aren't typos. Even in the frothy world of AI stocks, those multiples make people nervous.
After touching a new all-time high of $207.18 per share this month, Palantir has experienced a brutal pullback, dropping 24.82% from that peak. The selloff accelerated after renowned investor Michael Burry, the "Big Short" guy who called the housing crisis, revealed a bearish position against the stock worth $912 million. When someone with that track record bets against you, the market tends to pay attention.
The stock closed down 5.85% on Thursday at $155.74 and slipped another 0.07% in overnight trading. Despite the recent carnage, Palantir still scores high on Momentum and Growth metrics, with favorable price trends in the medium and long terms according to market data.
So what does all this mean? Insider selling isn't necessarily a red flag. Executives have bills to pay and portfolios to diversify too. But the volume here, combined with the valuation concerns and Burry's short position, creates an interesting narrative. Are these insiders taking chips off the table while they can, or is this just routine wealth management? The market seems to be leaning toward the former interpretation, at least for now.