Steve Cashman sold 399,461 shares.
This trade represented 19.68% of Cashman's direct holdings prior to the transactions.
All shares sold were held directly.
On June 5 and June 8, 2026, Butterfly Network (NYSE:BFLY) Chief Business Officer Steve Cashman disclosed the direct sale of 399,461 shares of Common Stock via open-market transactions for a total of approximately $1.89 million, according to a SEC Form 4 filing.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Shares sold (direct) | 399,461 |
| Transaction value | ~$1.9 million |
| Post-transaction shares (direct) | 1,630,407 |
| Post-transaction value (direct ownership) | ~$7.8 million |
Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 weighted average purchase price ($4.74); post-transaction value based on June 8, 2026 market close ($4.78).
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Price (as of market close July 2, 2026) | $7.68 |
| Market capitalization | $2 billion |
| Revenue (TTM) | $102.9 million |
| 1-year price change | 291.8% |
* 1-year performance calculated using July 2, 2026 as the reference date.
Butterfly Network leverages proprietary ultrasound-on-chip technology to deliver portable, connected imaging solutions for the healthcare sector. The company’s integrated approach—combining hardware, software, and cloud-based services—enables scalable deployment of point-of-care imaging across diverse clinical environments. Butterfly Network’s focus on accessibility and interoperability positions it as a disruptive force in the medical devices industry.
Cashman's sale was discretionary rather than scheduled, but that's not really the story here. The bigger question is whether Butterfly's recent run to the high-$8s reflects the business improving or the market repricing hope. Revenue growth has been solid but unspectacular — up 19% in 2025 and 25% in Q1 2026 — which doesn't fully explain a move that size. What changed is the story: a late-2025 licensing deal with Midjourney reframes Butterfly as a component and IP licensor, not just a device seller, and it's real money — a $10 million minimum annual fee, milestone payments up to $9 million, and $63 million of Butterfly's roughly $100 million in contracted future revenue now tied to that single relationship. That's meaningful, but it's also concentration risk: one customer anchors a big share of the growth story, and the stock has already priced in more than what's been recognized so far. If you like the core ultrasound business, the fundamentals argue for patience over chasing the run-up. If the appeal is the licensing pivot, the risk is now concrete and single-customer rather than diffuse. I lean toward a small starter position makes sense here, then watch execution over the next few quarters. It'll likely be volatile, but Butterfly's bet — putting real diagnostic imaging in more hands, more cheaply — is the kind of future worth investing in if the licensing revenue proves durable and the core business keeps compounding at its current pace. For a wider view of where Butterfly sits next to the more established names in the space, The Motley Fool's medical device stocks roundup is a useful benchmark for comparison.
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Seena Hassouna 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.