Carnival Corporation & plc insiders sold shares over the past year, led by Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer David Bernstein, who sold about US$12 million worth at roughly US$33.22 a share.
The selling comes as Carnival Corporation & insiders own 7.0% of the company, a stake worth about US$2.6 billion, and the group recorded no purchases over the same period. In the last quarter alone, insiders sold US$12 million worth of stock and again made no buys.
That matters because insider trading can give shareholders a read on confidence, even if selling is not always a clean signal. Bernstein’s sale was made well above the current share price of US$26.77, and the company is making money and growing profits.
The friction for investors is simple: insiders have been net sellers, not buyers, even as Carnival Corporation & plc remains profitable. The biggest sale over the past year came from a top finance executive, and the absence of any insider purchases in the last quarter leaves little to balance it.
For shareholders, the next question is not whether insiders can sell — they can — but whether the pattern says more about valuation, timing or something else the market has not yet priced in.