TLDR
- Comcast (CMCSA) fell 5.02% during regular trading on Thursday, closing at $28.57, before edging up 0.49% in pre-market to $28.71
- Comcast and NVIDIA launched an edge AI field trial to run AI workloads closer to customers, covering 65 million homes and businesses
- CEO Michael Cavanagh sold nearly 58,000 stock units in February for roughly $1.89 million, cutting his position by 8.52%
- Swiss Life Asset Management raised its stake in CMCSA by 44.6%, acquiring 284,217 units to reach total holdings worth ~$28.95 million
- Analyst consensus sits at “Hold” with a price target of $34.87; Zacks downgraded the stock to “strong sell” in February
Comcast (CMCSA) closed Thursday’s regular session down 5.02% at $28.57, one of its sharper single-day drops in recent weeks. Pre-market trading showed a small recovery, with the stock edging up 0.49% to $28.71.
The stock is down 15.50% over the past 12 months. It currently trades about 60% below its 52-week high of $37.72, with an RSI of 31.65 — putting it close to oversold territory.
The 50-day moving average sits at $30.24, while the 200-day is at $29.77. CMCSA’s P/E ratio is 5.32, and market cap stands at roughly $102.8 billion.
In January, Comcast posted Q4 earnings of $0.84 EPS, beating estimates of $0.75 by $0.09. Revenue came in at $32.31 billion, slightly below the $32.35 billion analyst forecast, but up 1.2% year-over-year.
Analysts now project full-year EPS of $4.33 for the current year.
Edge AI Partnership With NVIDIA
On Tuesday, Comcast announced an edge AI field trial with NVIDIA. The trial places NVIDIA GPUs in regional network facilities, bringing AI processing closer to end users across 65 million homes and businesses.
The project targets hyper-personalized advertising, an AI concierge for small businesses, and ultra-low-latency gaming.
Chief Network Officer Elad Nafshi said the goal is to explore “what becomes possible when AI inference happens only milliseconds from end users.”
It’s an interesting technical bet from a company whose core cable business has faced steady subscriber pressure.
Insider Activity and Institutional Moves
On the insider front, CEO Michael Cavanagh sold 57,947 units on February 11 at an average price of $32.66, totaling $1.89 million. That cut his position by 8.52%, leaving him with 622,336 units.
Chief Communications Officer Jennifer Khoury exercised 10,867 options at $28.38 on Wednesday and surrendered 10,514 units at $30.08 to cover taxes. She now holds 60,538 units directly.
Director Edward Breen received 30,000 Class A units through a Grantor Retained Annuity Trust at $0.00, bringing his direct holdings to 55,825.
On the institutional side, Swiss Life Asset Management increased its CMCSA position by 44.6% in Q3, adding 284,217 units to hold 921,259 total, worth approximately $28.95 million. Brighton Jones also raised its position by 150.9% during Q4.
Institutional investors and hedge funds collectively own 84.32% of the company.
Analyst sentiment is mixed. Citigroup and TD Cowen both carry “buy” ratings. BNP Paribas downgraded to “underperform” with a $27 target in February. Zacks moved to “strong sell” the same month. Royal Bank of Canada rates it “sector perform” with a $31 target.
The consensus across 29 analysts sits at “Hold” with a $34.87 price target.
Comcast also declared a quarterly dividend of $0.33 per unit, payable April 22 to stockholders of record as of April 1. That puts the annualized yield at approximately 4.6%.





