Okta stock dropped roughly 10.9% on Friday, touching a new 52-week low of $67.69. The stock closed Thursday at $76.04, making this one of its sharpest single-day drops in recent memory.
Okta, Inc., OKTA
Trading volume was notably heavy, with over 5.4 million shares changing hands during the session.
The immediate trigger was an insider sale disclosed this week. Larissa Schwartz, a company insider, sold 6,377 shares on April 7 at an average price of $79.75, collecting roughly $508,565. The sale reduced her position by 10.42%, leaving her with 54,825 shares.
The transaction was executed under a pre-arranged Rule 10b5-1 plan, which means it was scheduled in advance and does not necessarily reflect a negative view of the company’s prospects.
Still, insider sales tend to spook investors — and this one landed at an already-sensitive moment for the stock.
A second catalyst hit at the same time. Anthropic released its Claude Mythos model, described as specializing in cybersecurity tasks, including the ability to autonomously identify zero-day vulnerabilities.
The news sparked concern among investors about whether established security vendors can keep pace with AI-driven threat detection. Cybersecurity stocks broadly felt the pressure.
Analysts at DA Davidson and Evercore acknowledged the model’s advanced capabilities but downplayed any immediate financial impact on the sector.
The selloff comes despite a strong recent earnings report. Okta posted Q4 FY2026 EPS of $0.90, beating the $0.85 consensus estimate. Revenue came in at $761 million, up 11.6% year-over-year and ahead of the $749.87 million estimate.
The company issued FY2027 EPS guidance of $3.74–$3.82 and Q1 2027 guidance of $0.84–$0.86.
Okta also announced a $1 billion share buyback plan in January, authorized to repurchase up to 6.8% of outstanding stock.
Multiple analysts have trimmed price targets in recent weeks. Mizuho cut its target from $110 to $100. Piper Sandler dropped from $100 to $82. Canaccord Genuity moved from $120 to $95. JPMorgan nudged its target slightly higher, from $102 to $103.
Of 39 analysts covering the stock, 26 rate it a Buy, 11 a Hold, and two a Sell. The average price target sits at $103.25 — still well above current trading levels.
The stock’s 50-day moving average is $79.41 and its 200-day moving average is $85.17. At Friday’s low of $67.69, the stock was trading 46% below its 52-week high of $127.57.
Institutional investors hold 86.64% of the stock. Several smaller funds initiated or added positions in recent quarters.
Board member Jeff Epstein is set to resign at the company’s annual meeting in June 2026. Okta stated the decision is unrelated to any disagreements with the company.
InvestingPro has flagged Okta on its Most Undervalued watchlist based on current price levels.
The post Okta Stock Falls 11% to 52-Week Low on Insider Sale and AI Concerns appeared first on CoinCentral.


