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A Credo Executive Sold Nearly $24 Million in Stock Across Two Sales in One Day

A Credo Executive Sold Nearly $24 Million in Stock Across Two Sales in One Day

Key Points

  • The disposition involved 50,000 shares for a transaction value of $11.3 million based on the weighted average price of $225.45.

  • The sale represents 10% of the insider’s indirect holdings and 2% of their total equity position.

  • The transaction activity was executed indirectly through the Cheng Huang Family Trust.

  • The trade was conducted under a Rule 10b5-1 trading plan adopted on April 15, 2026, to manage personal liquidity.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Credo Technology Group ›

Yat Tung Lam, the chief operating officer of Credo Technology Group Holding Ltd (NASDAQ:CRDO), sold 50,000 shares on July 15, 2026, according to a recent SEC Form 4 filing.

Transaction summary

MetricValueShares sold (indirectly held)50,000Transaction value$11.3 millionPost-transaction shares (directly held)2.6 millionPost-transaction shares (indirectly held)475,000Post-transaction value$693.74 million

Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 weighted average sale price ($225.45); post-transaction value based on July 15, 2026 market close ($226.74).

Key questions

  • What was the regulatory context for this transaction?The sale was executed under a Rule 10b5-1 trading plan adopted by the Cheng Huang Family Trust on April 15, 2026, which allows insiders to set a pre-determined schedule for selling shares to avoid concerns about trading on non-public information.
  • How does this sale affect the insider’s total equity exposure?Despite the sale of 50,000 shares, Yat Tung Lam maintains a significant stake in the company, holding 2.6 million shares directly and 475,000 shares indirectly through entities including the Cheng Huang Family Trust.
  • What has been the recent price performance of the stock?As of the July 15, 2026, transaction date, the company’s shares have delivered a one-year return of 121%, with the trade occurring at $225.45 per share.

Company Overview

MetricValueShare Price (as of market close 2026-07-15)$226.74Market Capitalization$42.3 billionRevenue (TTM)$1.3 billionNet Income (TTM)$472.3 million

Company Snapshot

  • Credo Technology Group designs and delivers advanced high-speed connectivity solutions, including integrated circuits (ICs), active electrical cables (AECs), and SerDes chiplets optimized for optical and electrical Ethernet applications.
  • The company generates revenue through the development and sale of proprietary semiconductor solutions that enable high-speed data transmission across enterprise, cloud infrastructure, and telecommunications networks.
  • Credo serves a global customer base of equipment manufacturers, cloud service providers, and telecommunications operators across the United States, Mexico, Mainland China, Hong Kong, and other international markets.

Credo Technology Group operates as a specialized semiconductor designer with a market capitalization of $42.3 billion, leveraging proprietary serializer/deserializer (SerDes) technology to address the growing demand for high-speed connectivity infrastructure. The company has demonstrated significant market momentum, with TTM net income of $472.3 million representing a 36.4% net margin on $1.3 billion in revenue. As a pure-play connectivity solutions provider, Credo maintains a competitive advantage through its advanced chiplet architecture and proven ability to deliver solutions that support next-generation data center and telecommunications applications.

What this transaction means for investors

This sale ultimately looks like more scheduled profit-taking from Credo’s inner circle, not a warning. Lam sold through a family trust under a plan set in April, and 50,000 shares barely dents a stake that still tops 3 million shares directly and indirectly. He’s not the first executive here to trim on a preset schedule after this run, and that’s what’s worth remembering. When insiders sell small, planned slices while keeping the overwhelming bulk of their holdings, it reads as diversification after a stock that’s up 121% in a year, not a change of heart about the AI story. On the same day, Lam sold shares directly, but on a similar scale and again through a plan. Altogether, the sales amounted to about $23.9 million combined.

That story for Credo, however, is still remarkable. The firm just closed a fiscal year in which revenue more than tripled past $1.3 billion and non-GAAP net income jumped more than fivefold to $662 million, with a record $437 million fourth quarter. CEO Bill Brennan called it “another defining year” and guided to continued rapid growth in fiscal 2027. One risk to focus on, however, is concentration: About 90% of revenue comes from Credo’s top 10 customers, with two alone topping 10% each. The story is working, with shares up so much, but thes tock is still volatile, falling 8% on Thursday alone.

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Jonathan Ponciano has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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