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Is Now the Time to Sell or Buy Ambarella Stock After Its CFO Dumped Shares Worth Over $400,000?
John Alexander Young, Chief Financial Officer of Ambarella (AMBA +1.19%), reported the sale of 7,615 ordinary shares for a total of approximately $406,000, according to the SEC Form 4 filing.
Transaction summary
Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 weighted average purchase price ($53.32); post-transaction value based on March 19, 2026 market close ($55.86).
Key questions
The 7,615 shares sold is meaningfully larger than Young’s median direct sale of 2,614 shares since March 2025, representing a higher-than-typical percentage of his holdings (5.99% versus a historical median of 1.87% per event).
The transaction involved the exercise of options prior to the sale, indicating that shares sold originated from recently vested awards rather than from Young’s pre-existing shareholdings.
Post-transaction, Young retains 119,594 directly held shares, or approximately 0.28% of Ambarella’s outstanding shares, reflecting a continued but gradually decreasing ownership position.
The cadence and structure of Young’s recent activity — frequent, similarly timed transactions, often tied to option vesting — suggest routine portfolio management rather than a response to share price changes or one-off events.
Company overview
Company snapshot
Ambarella is a leading provider of semiconductor solutions specializing in video processing and artificial intelligence, with a focus on automotive and security applications.
The company leverages its expertise in system-on-a-chip design to deliver high-quality, power-efficient products that address demanding imaging and AI workloads. Its integrated approach and strong relationships with OEMs and ODMs underpin its competitive position in the evolving semiconductor landscape.
What this transaction means for investors
Ambarella CFO John Young’s March sale of 7,615 shares in multiple transactions is not a cause for concern. He sold the stock to pay tax obligations resulting from the vesting of restricted stock units granted to him as a performance award.
Ambarella shares had been performing well last year thanks to the rise of artificial intelligence. But that changed in 2026 with the stock experiencing a decline from the 52-week high of $96.69 reached last November.
Ambarella delivered robust revenue growth in its 2026 fiscal year ended Jan. 31, hitting $390.7 million, compared to $284.9 million in the prior year. However, the company isn’t profitable, posting a fiscal 2026 net loss of $75.9 million.
On top of that, its share price had reached a lofty valuation, so was ripe for a pullback. Its price-to-sales ratio of six isn’t cheap, making now a good time to sell. For investors thinking to buy, the stock may be a worthwhile long-term investment if you believe it can maintain strong sales growth.