Roku stock slips in first post-holiday session as filing flags planned insider sale

Roku stock slips in first post-holiday session as filing flags planned insider sale

February 18, 2026

New York, February 17, 2026, 18:32 EST — After-hours

  • Roku dropped roughly 1.6% Tuesday, with shares sticking close to their closing level in after-hours moves.
  • Form 144 paperwork indicates CFO and COO Dan Jedda is looking to unload 3,000 shares.
  • Pivotal Research bumped up its price target but stuck with a buy call on the stock.

Roku, Inc. dropped roughly 1.6% Tuesday, ending the after-hours session at $88.58. Shares ranged from $85.46 up to $90.34 over the course of the day.

Investors returned from the Presidents Day break to the first complete U.S. trading session, sifting through rate-sensitive growth stocks to pick out the winners and losers.

Roku grabbed the spotlight last week after projecting 2026 revenue that topped Wall Street’s expectations, with its platform division—the digital ad and content distribution arm—doing the heavy lifting. “Roku’s relentless focus on the underlying platform is reaping fruits and turning scale into a repeatable monetisation engine,” PP Foresight’s Paolo Pescatore said. CEO Anthony Wood, meanwhile, pointed out to analysts that the company was “on track to surpass 100 million streaming households this year.” Reuters

Pivotal Research on Monday bumped its price target on Roku up to $140 from $135, reiterating a buy rating. The firm cited Roku’s “Switzerland-like positioning” in streaming, according to a TheFly note shared by TipRanks. TipRanks

On Tuesday, a Form 144 filing revealed Dan Jedda intends to sell 3,000 shares valued at $266,640 in total, with Morgan Stanley Smith Barney handling the transaction. Insiders use Form 144 to notify the SEC before selling stock under Rule 144.

The sale is minor when stacked up against Roku’s total shares outstanding, but the timing isn’t ideal. With shares bouncing around after last week’s strong guidance, and Tuesday’s choppy action adding to the nerves, short-term traders aren’t getting any more comfortable.

But for investors, the real issue isn’t just the filing. The focus is on whether streaming ad demand stays strong enough to carry Roku’s platform growth and margins as audiences move further toward connected TV.

But it can just as easily swing the opposite way. If economic data sours, ad spending could drop off fast. Roku is already up against fierce competition, both for eyeballs and advertising money, all across the streaming landscape.

The next shot of volatility: Wednesday, 2:00 p.m. ET. That’s when the Federal Reserve drops minutes from its latest policy meeting—a release known for shaking up rate bets and sparking swings in high-beta stocks like Roku.

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