New York, July 11, 2026, 18:26 (EDT)
Axon Enterprise, Inc. NASDAQ:AXON dropped roughly $6.0 billion in market cap from the end of trade Tuesday to Friday, with shares giving up 11.7% over three sessions. The stock closed Friday at $565.80, down from $640.46 on Tuesday. The market cap drop is based on the company’s latest share count of 80.6 million.
Axon’s valuation is still high after the selloff. Shares trade at 73.6 times the 2026 adjusted earnings estimate of $7.69 per share. That P/E compares to Motorola Solutions Inc. NYSE:MSI, which is at about 25 times the midpoint of its own 2026 adjusted profit outlook, and the S&P 500, valued around 20 times expected earnings.
| Valuation measure | Axon | Motorola Solutions | S&P 500 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 earnings base | $7.69 consensus adjusted EPS | $16.93 guidance midpoint | — |
| Forward P/E | 73.6x | 25.0x | About 20x |
| Multiple versus S&P 500 | 3.7x | 1.25x | 1.0x |
Non-GAAP, or adjusted, earnings take out certain accounting items. Each company has its own definition.
Axon ended the short week down 5.2% from its July 2 finish, lagging the S&P 500’s 1.2% rise. Trading volume on Friday hit 763,239 shares, about 37.5% under the 65-day average, which slowed the bearish tone but didn’t wipe it out. Shares pulled back right after wrapping seven up days on Tuesday.
| Session | Closing price | Daily move |
|---|---|---|
| July 6 | $622.35 | up 4.24% |
| July 7 | $640.46 | added 2.91% |
| July 8 | $599.80 | dropped 6.35% |
| July 9 | $582.00 | fell 2.97% |
| $565.80 | lost 2.78% |
Axon’s latest filing, out after the bell Friday, focused on board changes. The company named Eiso Kant, who co-founded AI firm poolside and works in AI-computing infrastructure, and Vivek Mohindra, ex-chief strategy officer at Dell Technologies Inc. NYSE:DELL, as new independent directors. Kant will be a non-voting observer for the board’s M&A and capital-structure committee. Mohindra is joining the audit and compensation groups.
Chief Executive Patrick Smith sold 10,000 shares Tuesday, according to a separate SEC filing. The trades averaged $643.79, for total proceeds around $6.44 million. The sale amounted to about 0.3% of Smith’s direct holdings before the transaction, and was done under a Rule 10b5-1 plan he adopted in May 2025, which pre-schedules trades. The filing does not link the sale to the later stock drop.
Axon’s premium is backed by solid numbers. The company in May raised its 2026 revenue-growth outlook to 30% to 32% after first-quarter revenue hit $807.3 million, topping analyst calls for $778.5 million. Services revenue was up about 35% to $354.5 million. Operating income came in at $29.2 million, swinging from an $8.8 million loss last year.
Competition is picking up for one of Axon’s more recent bets. Motorola said in June it will buy Israel-based D-Fend Solutions in a $1.5 billion deal, adding tools that can take over hostile drones rather than destroy or jam them. Motorola is aiming for $185 million in revenue from D-Fend in 2026. Axon President Joshua Isner has called the federal law enforcement market “a major opportunity” for both its core lineup and its anti-drone products. Reuters
U.S. markets are shut for the weekend, leaving the focus on upcoming inflation numbers and earnings. June consumer-price data hits Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. EDT, and June retail sales follow Thursday. The big banks will start reporting their second-quarter results. “A lot of factors coming to a head all at once,” said Michael Reynolds, vice president of investment strategy at Glenmede. Bureau of Labor Statistics
The downside channel stands out. If the $7.69 earnings estimate holds, chopping 10 points off Axon’s P/E cuts $76.90 from its implied value. A 60x multiple would bring shares down to around $461, 18% under Friday’s close, but still more than double Motorola’s multiple. A bookings miss, slower cash, or higher inflation could drive the re-rating. This calculation is just a sensitivity check, not a forecast.
Investors backing the bull case on Axon are still betting on steady growth, better cash conversion and more software adoption among existing hardware clients. Economic numbers coming next week won’t answer those operational concerns. But changes to rates used for valuation could shift the shares, and after a $6 billion swing, that’s leaving the stock on edge.