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CrowdStrike announces four-to-one split after earnings report

CrowdStrike four-to-one – CrowdStrike said its board approved a four-to-one stock split of its Class A common stock after the company released fiscal 2027 first-quarter earnings. Shares will be set based on the June 25 close, with additional shares arriving July 1 and split-adjusted tr

CrowdStrike didn’t just deliver its fiscal 2027 first-quarter earnings on Wednesday. It used the moment to announce something that will change how investors see its stock—starting next week, when the company’s shares begin trading on a split-adjusted basis.

The cybersecurity company’s board has approved a four-to-one stock split for all of the company’s Class A common stock. It’s the first time CrowdStrike has done a split since going public nearly seven years ago, and the timing lands with investors already paying close attention to price moves.

A stock split is a corporate move that changes the number of shares outstanding—typically increasing the share count—while leaving the overall value unchanged at the company level. For shareholders. that means their total holdings don’t lose value in the process. but each individual share ends up priced lower than before.

Here’s how CrowdStrike’s split is set to work. Every stockholder will receive three more shares for each share they own under the four-to-one structure.

CrowdStrike will establish the list of stockholders when the market closes on Thursday, June 25. The following Wednesday, July 1, stockholders will receive their three additional shares—again, after the closing bell.

The company expects split-adjusted trading to begin when the market opens the next day, Thursday, July 2.

Even with the mechanics set, investors won’t be able to know the exact “split-adjusted” share price in advance. That number will be determined by CrowdStrike’s stock price at the close of business on July 1.

What investors can see now is how the market has been reacting ahead of the split. In premarket trading on Thursday, June 4, CrowdStrike’s shares were down more than 10% to about $672 per share. The decline came alongside analyst commentary tied to “relatively skinnier net new [annual recurring revenue] beat this quarter and elevated expectations following the stock’s 60% move over the last month.”.

If that $672 level held through the close on July 1, the implied split-adjusted price would be about $168 per share—simply reflecting the four-to-one change in share count rather than a new fundamental valuation.

The sequence of dates matters because it’s those specific cutoffs—June 25 for record. July 1 for the share delivery. and July 2 for split-adjusted trading—that determine how investors’ accounts will update. Until July 1’s close. the stock’s split-adjusted price remains a moving target. tied directly to where the market finishes that day.

CrowdStrike CRWD stock split four-to-one Class A common stock June 25 record date July 1 share issuance July 2 split-adjusted trading earnings report investors

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