The CEO of C3.ai sold 52,194 shares for a transaction value of $429,000 on March 31, 2026; an additional 47,316 shares were gifted to a trust of his.
Dispositions included 99,510 direct shares, with all shares from the Class A Common Stock category.
Ehikian retains Class A Common Stock holdings of 674,169 shares (direct) and 229,804 shares (indirect), according to the Form 4.
Stephen Bradley Ehikian, the chief executive officer of C3.ai (NYSE:AI), reported the disposition of 52,194 shares of Common Stock via open-market sale and 47,316 shares via direct gifting, according to a SEC Form 4 filing.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Shares sold (direct) | 52,194 |
| Shares gifted (direct) | 47,316 |
| Transaction value | ~$429,000 |
| Post-transaction Class A shares (direct) | 674,169 |
| Post-transaction Class A shares (indirect) | 229,804 |
Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 weighted average purchase price ($8.22); post-transaction value based on March 31, 2026 market close ($8.42).
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Price (as of market close 3/31/26) | $8.22 |
| Market capitalization | $1.23 billion |
| Revenue (TTM) | $307.39 million |
| 1-year price change | -54.50% |
* 1-year performance calculated using March 31, 2026 as the reference date.
C3.ai is a technology company specializing in enterprise artificial intelligence software solutions, serving clients globally across a range of industries. The company leverages strategic alliances with major industry and cloud partners to accelerate the adoption and integration of its AI platforms. C3.ai’s focus on scalable, industry-specific applications positions it as a key enabler for digital transformation initiatives among large organizations.
C3.ai’s been having a rough year on the market, but it’s important to look past that performance when attempting to assess what this sale might suggest, especially since the filing is pretty clear about this sale being largely administrative instead of discretional. Despite shares being down about 55% over the past year, the key detail is that the sale was driven by automatic sell-to-cover mechanics tied to RSU vesting.
The bigger story is whether the business is stabilizing after a tough stretch. C3.ai reported fiscal third-quarter revenue of $53.3 million, with subscription revenue making up 90% of the total, reinforcing its shift toward a more recurring model. Still, profitability remains a challenge, with a GAAP net loss of $133.4 million for the quarter and a negative operating margin as restructuring efforts continue. Management is targeting improved efficiency, including roughly $135 million in expected cost savings, while positioning for a return to growth through enterprise AI deployments and government contracts.
For long-term investors, this comes down to execution, and the insider activity does not meaningfully change the thesis. The real question is whether revenue growth can reaccelerate and losses narrow. With $621.9 million in cash, the company has time, but it still needs to prove that demand for enterprise AI translates into durable, profitable growth.
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Jonathan Ponciano has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends C3.ai. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.