2,959 shares sold for a total of ~$82,000 at a weighted average price of around $27.80 per share on March 5, 2026.
The transaction represented 36.5% of Krishnan's direct common stock holdings, reducing his position from 8,100 to 5,141 shares.
The sale was a routine, pre-planned tax-withholding event tied to RSU vesting -- not a discretionary open-market sale driven by a change in outlook.
Krishnan retains 16,200 restricted stock units (direct), which can be converted to common stock in the future.
Viswanadhan Krishnan, Chief Corporate Development and Strategy Officer at Agios Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:AGIO), reported the open-market sale of 2,959 shares of common stock for a total of roughly $82,000 on March 5, 2026, according to an SEC Form 4 filing.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Shares sold (direct) | 2,959 |
| Transaction value | ~$82,260 |
| Post-transaction shares (direct) | 5,141 |
| Post-transaction value (direct ownership) | ~$152,225 |
Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 weighted average sale price ($27.80); post-transaction value based on March 31, 2026 market close ($29.61).
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Market capitalization | $2.1 billion |
| Revenue (TTM) | $54.0 million |
| Net income (TTM) | ($412.8 million) |
| 1-year price change* | 22.6% |
* 1-year performance calculated as of March 31, 2026.
At first glance, an insider selling 36% of his direct stock position sounds like a reason to pause -- but the details tell a different story.
This was not a discretionary sale. Krishnan's restricted stock units (RSUs) vested on March 5, 2026 -- one year after he joined Agios -- automatically delivering 8,100 shares. Selling roughly a third of those shares to cover the associated tax bill is standard operating procedure for executives at virtually every public company. The transaction was executed under a Rule 10b5-1 plan embedded in his original RSU agreement, set up specifically to handle this kind of administrative sale. In other words, no one woke up that morning and decided to sell.
What arguably matters more for investors is what Krishnan did not sell. He still holds 16,200 RSUs that have yet to vest, representing roughly three times his remaining common stock position. And just four days before the tax sale, he received a fresh round of annual compensation grants -- 14,000 new RSUs and options on 52,000 shares -- signaling that his equity stake in Agios is growing, not shrinking.
In its most recent earnings report, Agios reported that PYRUKYND -- its lead commercial drug -- generated $20 million in quarterly revenue, an 86% jump compared to the same period a year earlier, with full-year 2025 revenue reaching $54 million. The company also ended 2025 with approximately $1.2 billion in cash, giving it a substantial runway to fund its pipeline without near-term financing pressure. And in breaking news, Agios today announced it will pursue FDA accelerated approval for mitapivat in sickle cell disease, with an sNDA submission planned in the coming months. That's a potentially significant label expansion for a drug already approved in two other rare blood disorders.
Agios is a niche biotech with a real commercial product in PYRUKYND and a pipeline targeting rare blood disorders. For those looking to gain broader exposure to the rare disease or specialty pharma space without concentrating in a single name, ETFs like the iShares U.S. Pharmaceuticals ETF (NYSEMKT:IHE) or the Health Care Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSEMKT:XLV) can provide more diversified exposure.
Bottom line: this insider sale is a tax bill, not a warning sign.
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Andy Gould 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.