Dropbox, Inc.

DBX · NASDAQ

Market closed$30.62$0.170000 (+0.56%)After hours $30.15 · -1.53%

Key statistics

Previous close$30.45
Open$30.76
Day high$30.94
Day low$30.36
52-week high$32.40
52-week low$21.70
Market cap7.79B
Volume3.34M
Average volume3.91M
P/E ratio10.60
Forward P/E
EPS2.89
Dividend yield0.00%

Market context

Why it moved

Dropbox edged higher amid growing investor anticipation ahead of its scheduled second quarter 2026 earnings release on August 6, with recent strong momentum building on optimism around its AI-driven productivity tool, Dash, despite lingering concerns about revenue declines and recent insider selling by its CTO.

What is happening

Recent company-specific developments and publisher coverage.

July 18, 2026Dropbox edged higher on the session, closing up modestly despite broader software sector headwinds stemming from IBM's historic 25% plunge last week, which rattled enterprise software stocks on fears that AI infrastructure spending is crowding out traditional software budgets. Adding a note of caution, Dropbox's CTO Ali Dasdan sold nearly $390K in shares on July 14 per an SEC filing, while the company announced it will report Q2 2026 earnings on August 6 — an event investors will watch closely given Dropbox's ongoing revenue contraction and its strategic pivot toward the AI-powered Dash product.

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July 16, 2026Dropbox edged up modestly in regular trading, outperforming a broader tech sector dragged down by semiconductor weakness and AI-driven capex reprioritization concerns. A key catalyst for investor focus was the company's announcement that it will report Q2 2026 earnings on August 6, setting a near-term catalyst. The software space remains under pressure following IBM's historic 25% plunge on a Q2 revenue miss, as clients shift IT budgets toward hardware and memory over software — a headwind Dropbox investors are monitoring ahead of its own results. Minor insider selling by CTO Ali Dasdan under a pre-planned 10b5-1 program drew little concern.

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July 16, 2026Dropbox closed modestly higher, outperforming the broader software sector after IBM's historic 25% single-day plunge rattled the industry. IBM's warning that clients are reprioritizing IT budgets toward AI hardware and memory over software applications sent shockwaves through the sector, pulling peers like ServiceNow, Salesforce, and Adobe sharply lower on Tuesday. Dropbox's relative resilience on Wednesday — edging up 1.27% versus a mixed XLK — may reflect its positioning as a lower-cost, productivity-focused SaaS tool less exposed to enterprise capex reprioritization than legacy software giants.

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July 15, 2026Dropbox shares closed modestly higher, managing to buck a sector-wide rout triggered by IBM's historic earnings warning, which sent the tech software ETF (IGV) down over 4% as enterprise software stocks broadly tumbled. IBM's shock Q2 revenue miss — driven by clients shifting capex away from software toward AI hardware infrastructure — sparked fears of a broader spending squeeze across the software industry, with Salesforce, Microsoft, and ServiceNow all declining sharply. Dropbox's relative resilience may reflect its defensive positioning as a mature, cash-generative business with limited exposure to enterprise AI infrastructure budgets, even as a company insider filed to sell approximately $383K in shares. The broader market found partial support from a softer-than-expected June CPI print.

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July 14, 2026Dropbox closed modestly higher, gaining 1.34%, as the broader software sector provided a mixed backdrop on a volatile macro day. A recent Russell index reshuffle reclassified Dropbox into the Russell 1000 Value-Defensive Index—removing it from growth benchmarks—underscoring its repositioning as a cash-generative, defensive name rather than a growth play. Citi's Q2 software sector preview highlighted a 'K-shaped divergence,' with AI infrastructure leaders like Palantir and Snowflake favored while traditional application software faces mounting competitive pressure, a headwind that contextualizes Dropbox's value-oriented market standing heading into earnings season.

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July 11, 2026Dropbox shares closed modestly lower, slipping 0.75%, as investors weighed a recent index reclassification—the company was moved from Russell growth benchmarks into the Russell 1000 Value-Defensive indices on June 27—signaling a formal style shift toward value positioning. Despite a strong Q1 2026 beat (EPS of $0.76 vs. $0.73 estimate; revenue of $629.5M vs. $615.9M forecast), a $900M share buyback expansion, a new $400M credit facility, and an RBC Capital Outperform rating with a $32 price target, the stock remains range-bound amid ongoing concerns over churn and ARPU pressure. A pre-planned insider sale of $58K by director Karen Peacock drew attention, though the routine 10b5-1 transaction reflects little fundamental signal.

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July 10, 2026Dropbox rose roughly 2% on Wednesday, outperforming the broader software sector as investors rotated into software names following a chip stock selloff driven by Samsung's mixed earnings reception. The gain came amid notable news: Dropbox was recently reclassified from Russell growth benchmarks into the Russell 1000 Value-Defensive and Defensive indices, signaling a formal style shift that could attract value-oriented and index-tracking investors. A director insider sale and the company's ongoing narrative around AI monetization via Dash, a $900M buyback program, and a new $400M credit facility remain the key focal points for investors weighing capital discipline against soft top-line growth.

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July 9, 2026Dropbox closed essentially flat amid a broader software rotation story playing out across the market. While semiconductor stocks were hammered — with the iShares Semiconductor ETF falling over 6% following Samsung's disappointing earnings reception — software names saw relative strength as investors rotated out of chip stocks. Separately, a Form 144 filing revealed insider Karen Peacock sold 4,000 shares under a 10b5-1 plan, while analysts at Yahoo Finance highlighted Dropbox's streak of beating earnings estimates. The broader macro backdrop included escalating U.S.-Iran tensions lifting oil prices and weighing on risk sentiment, though the XLK technology ETF held relatively steady.

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Simply Wall Street · July 17, 2026Dropbox (DBX) Earnings Date Puts Its AI Narrative And Valuation Back In FocusBitget · July 17, 2026Dropbox files Form 3 for Chief Product Officer Michael Ivan TorresStock Titan · July 17, 2026Dropbox (DBX) Chief Product Officer Michael Torres files initial insider reportWebWire · July 16, 2026The context layer for AI: Bringing trusted Dropbox content into OpenAI workflowsStock Titan · July 16, 2026Dropbox sets date to discuss its June-quarter resultsBarchart.com · May 30, 2026Dropbox Gets A New CEO. The Payoff for DBX Stock Could Take a Long Time.Stock Titan · May 7, 2026Dropbox posts 40.1% margin as quarterly revenue reaches $629.5MStocktwits · February 20, 2026Why Is Dropbox Stock Down 3% In Premarket Today?
Mt Newswire · July 16, 2026Dropbox Insider Sold Shares Worth $389,160, According to a Recent SEC Filing
Mt Newswire · June 1, 2026Dropbox Signs $400 Million Credit Facility, Launches $900 Million Share Buyback Program
Mt Newswire · May 26, 2026Dropbox Names Ashraf Alkarmi as Co-Chief Executive
Mt Newswire · May 26, 2026Dropbox Names Ashraf Alkarmi as Co-CEO
Mt Newswire · May 26, 2026Street Color: Dropbox CEO Drew Houston Stepping Down, CNBC Reports
Benzinga · May 26, 2026'Dropbox CEO Drew Houston To Step Down; Dropbox CEO Drew Houston Will Be Transitioning Into An Executive Chairman Role; Ashraf Alkarmi Is Being Promoted To Co-CEO Before Eventually Taking The Job On His Own' - CNBC
Benzinga · May 11, 2026Citigroup Maintains Neutral on Dropbox, Raises Price Target to $28
Benzinga · May 8, 2026RBC Capital Maintains Outperform on Dropbox, Raises Price Target to $32

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