McKesson Shares Slide 1.53% on 166th-Ranked Volume Amid CEO's Rule 10b5-1 Sale and Mixed Institutional Bets on Dividend Hike
McKesson (MCK) fell 1.53% on August 25, with a trading volume of $0.48 billion, a 42.66% decline from the prior day, ranking 166th in market activity. The drop followed a Rule 10b5-1-compliant insider sale by CEO Brian Tyler, who disposed of 11,930 shares on August 22, reducing his direct stake to 4,012 shares. The transaction, part of a pre-arranged trading plan, did not trigger immediate regulatory concerns but may influence short-term investor sentiment.
The company announced a quarterly dividend hike to $0.82 per share, up from $0.71, with a September 2 record date and October 1 payment. Despite this, earnings for the second quarter fell short of estimates at $8.26 per share, while revenue rose 23.4% year-over-year to $97.83 billion. Institutional ownership shifted amid the selloff, with APG Asset Management cutting its position by 9% to 132,644 shares. Conversely, GAMMA Investing LLC significantly increased its stake, now holding 2.39 million shares valued at $1.61 billion, signaling divergent views on the stock’s near-term outlook.
Analyst activity remained mixed, with UBSUBS-- and Bank of AmericaBAC-- raising price targets to $805 and $800, respectively, while Wall Street Zen downgraded from "strong-buy" to "buy." The stock’s 52-week range of $464.42–$737.89 and a forward P/E of 27.42 suggest valuation flexibility. However, insider sales totaling 56,620 shares over 90 days, including 53.19% reductions by two executives, may weigh on confidence. The dividend payout ratio of 11.32% remains sustainable, but earnings volatility—exacerbated by a negative 196.66% return on equity—highlights operational challenges.
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