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A Freshworks Executive Sold Over 32,000 Company Shares. Is the Stock a Buy or Sell?
Freshworks (FRSH 4.65%), a global SaaS provider, reported a sale by its Chief Integrated Customer Growth Officer, Mika Yamamoto, amid ongoing expansion in customer engagement and IT service management.
Mika Yamamoto disclosed the direct sale of 32,577 shares of Common Stock for a transaction value of approximately $275,000, as reported in a SEC Form 4 filing.
Transaction summary
Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 weighted average purchase price ($8.45).
Key questions
This transaction is the largest single direct sale by shares in the analyzed history, exceeding the median sell-only trade size of 3,574 shares across 11 prior sell events from November 2023 to March 2026.
The sale comprised 2.81% of direct holdings at the time, a higher proportion than the historical median of 0.30% per transaction, reflecting both increased trade size and available share capacity.
No; the sale involved only directly held Common Stock, with no indirect, trust, or derivative (option) securities disclosed or exercised.
Following this transaction, Yamamoto retains 1,127,723 directly held Class A Common Stock shares, representing ongoing exposure and capacity for further trading under the Rule 10b5-1 plan.
Company overview
Company snapshot
Freshworks operates at scale with 4,400 employees and a global footprint, delivering modern SaaS solutions from its headquarters in San Mateo, California. The company’s strategy centers on accessible, easy-to-implement software that addresses core business needs in customer engagement and IT service management.
What this transaction means for investors
The sale of over 32,000 Freshworks shares by Chief Integrated Customer Growth Officer Mika Yamamoto is not a cause for concern. She executed the transaction as part of a Rule 10b5-1 trading plan, which she adopted in September of 2025.
A Rule 10b5-1 trading plan is often implemented by insiders to avoid accusations of making trades based on insider information. Moreover, she retained over one million shares after the sale, indicating she is not in a rush to dispose of her holdings.
Mika Yamamoto’s March 4 transaction came at a time when Freshworks stock was well below its 52-week high of $16.48 reached in 2025. In fact, shares plunged to a low of $6.79 in February as the company’s forecasted sales for 2026 missed Wall Street’s expectations.
Freshworks projects 2026 revenue to reach between $952 million and $960 million. This range is a solid increase from 2025’s sales of $838.8 million, which represented 16% year-over-year growth.
The company is doing well. Not only are sales growing, its 2025 operating income of $13.2 million was a substantial improvement over the prior year’s operating loss of $138.6 million.
With the drop in its share price, Freshworks’ price-to-sales ratio of three hovers around a low point for the past year. This suggests the stock is at a compelling valuation. Given its growing business, Freshworks looks like a buy, although now is not a good time for shareholders to sell.