NEW YORK, December 30, 2025, 22:06 ET — Market closed
- Palo Alto Networks shares ended little changed at $186.85 on Tuesday.
- SEC filings disclosed share sales by President William D. Jenkins Jr. and CFO Dipak Golechha under pre-arranged trading plans. SEC+1
- Cybersecurity peers slipped modestly as major U.S. indexes finished lower. Reuters
Palo Alto Networks shares finished flat on Tuesday after regulatory filings showed stock sales by two top executives, in muted year-end trading. SEC+1
The disclosures matter now because thin holiday liquidity can amplify reactions to company-specific signals, even when the transactions are routine. Investors also head into the final sessions of the year looking for clues on 2026 demand across cybersecurity budgets.
The trades were reported in Form 4 filings, the SEC document insiders must file to disclose changes in their holdings. Both executives said the sales were made under Rule 10b5-1 plans, which are pre-arranged programs that set trading instructions in advance. SEC+1
Palo Alto Networks ended at $186.85, up $0.01 from the prior close. The stock traded between $186.08 and $187.72, with about 2.8 million shares changing hands, according to market data.
Broader markets leaned lower, with the S&P 500, Nasdaq Composite and Dow Jones Industrial Average each down on the day, Reuters market screens showed. Reuters
Cybersecurity peers also edged down. CrowdStrike, Fortinet and Zscaler each finished slightly lower, leaving the group largely rangebound into year-end, market data showed.
A filing showed President William D. Jenkins Jr. sold 6,218 shares on Dec. 26 at prices around $188 a share, for proceeds of about $1.17 million. The filing showed he held 149,121 shares after the transactions. SEC
A separate filing showed CFO Dipak Golechha sold 5,000 shares on Dec. 23 at $188.182, for proceeds of about $940,910, and held 155,119 shares afterward. SEC
In both cases, the filings said the trades were executed under 10b5-1 plans. Based on the reported holdings, the sales represented low single-digit percentages of each executive’s stake, which can limit their signaling value for some investors. SEC+1
For longer-term holders, attention remains on whether Palo Alto can sustain growth as customers consolidate spending onto fewer security platforms. The company has also been active on M&A, including its announced $3.35 billion deal for cloud monitoring firm Chronosphere and a roughly $25 billion agreement to buy CyberArk, Reuters has reported. Reuters+1
Before next session, investors will also look for any additional end-of-year filings and watch whether Palo Alto’s shares can push back toward the $190 area after spending the day in the high-$180s.
The next major scheduled catalyst is earnings. Palo Alto is expected to report around Feb. 12, based on past reporting patterns and market calendars, though the company has not confirmed a date. Nasdaq+1
Traders will be listening for updates on subscription momentum — annual recurring revenue (ARR), a measure of contracted subscription revenue expected over a year — and billings, a proxy for near-term customer demand. Management commentary on deal timing and integration costs for recent acquisitions is also likely to draw focus. Reuters


