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Director Richard L. Dalzell of Intuit INC. (NASDAQ:INTU), a prominent software company with an impressive 80% gross profit margin and market capitalization of $184 billion, sold 965 shares of common stock between September 9 and September 11, 2025, according to a Form 4 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The sales, executed under a pre-arranged 10b5-1 trading plan, totaled $665,950. According to InvestingPro, the stock currently trades near its Fair Value.
On September 9 and 10, Dalzell sold 333 shares each day at prices of $669.31 and $669.39, respectively. On September 11, he sold a further 279 shares in multiple transactions.
The September 11 sales were executed at prices ranging from $658.568 to $665.125. Specifically, 80 shares were sold at an average price of $658.568 (ranging from $658.15 to $658.83), 84 shares at an average of $660.1781 (ranging from $659.56 to $660.50), 41 shares at an average of $661.0417 (ranging from $660.90 to $661.19), 64 shares at an average of $662.2425 (ranging from $661.92 to $662.91), 32 shares at an average of $664.15 (ranging from $663.85 to $664.45), and 32 shares at an average of $665.125 (ranging from $665.05 to $665.20).
Following these transactions, Dalzell directly owns 14,475 shares of Intuit .
In other recent news, Intuit reported its fourth-quarter results, showing a 20% revenue growth for the quarter and 16% for fiscal year 2025. Despite these strong figures, the company’s first-quarter fiscal 2026 guidance appeared to disappoint investors, leading to a decline in after-hours trading. RBC Capital maintained its Outperform rating with an $850 price target, while KeyBanc adjusted its target to $825, citing Mailchimp-related challenges. UBS also lowered its price target to $725, maintaining a Neutral rating, due to conservative guidance that fell short of analyst expectations. Meanwhile, Stifel reduced its price target to $800, highlighting moderating growth, but kept a Buy rating due to positive developments in Intuit’s Credit Karma segment and its IES/QBOA growth. Mizuho reiterated an Outperform rating with an $875 price target, viewing recent share weakness as a buying opportunity. The firm noted that Intuit’s core business momentum remains strong, despite slightly lower-than-expected guidance in some areas. These developments reflect a mixed but generally optimistic outlook from analysts on Intuit’s future performance.
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