Granahan Investment Management sold 2,470,110 shares of Genius Sports Limited in the first quarter; the estimated transaction value was $17.59 million based on first-quarter 2026 average pricing.
The quarter-end position value fell by $62.70 million, reflecting both trading and market price changes.
The post-sale holding stood at 5,383,762 shares valued at $23.85 million.
Granahan Investment Management, LLC reduced its stake in Genius Sports Limited (NYSE:GENI) by 2,470,110 shares in first-quarter 2026, an estimated $17.59 million transaction based on quarterly average pricing, according to a May 15, 2026, SEC filing.
According to its SEC filing dated May 15, 2026, Granahan Investment Management sold 2,470,110 shares of Genius Sports Limited during the first quarter. The estimated value of shares sold was $17.59 million, calculated using the quarter’s average share price. The fund ended the quarter holding 5,383,762 shares, with a value of $23.85 million at March 31, 2026.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Price (as of market close 2026-05-14) | $4.89 |
| Market Capitalization | $1.31 billion |
| Revenue (TTM) | $713.45 million |
| Net Income (TTM) | ($158.85 million) |
Genius Sports Limited is a leading provider of technology-driven solutions for the global sports ecosystem, specializing in real-time data, streaming, and integrity services. The company leverages proprietary technology to deliver mission-critical data and content to sports leagues, betting operators, and media organizations worldwide.
Granahan cut its position significantly, but it held onto over 5 million shares at quarter-end, meaning the fund was reducing exposure rather than abandoning the thesis entirely. Still, it’s hard to ignore that Genius shares also had a rough first quarter, with shares tanking nearly 30% on February 5, the same day Genius announced it was acquiring digital sports and media network Legend for up to $1.2 billion, which some worried may be too steep a price tag.
What's interesting, however, is that the sale and recent underperformance came as Genius continues to execute operationally. First-quarter revenue climbed 31% year over year to $188 million, driven by strength in both its betting and media businesses, while adjusted EBITDA rose 21% to nearly $24 million. Management also raised its full-year outlook following the Legend acquisition, now targeting $990 million to $1.01 billion in revenue and $270 million to $280 million in adjusted EBITDA.
Meanwhile, the company continues to deepen relationships across the sports ecosystem, highlighting partnerships with the NCAA, Pac-12, WPP, NBC Sports Regional Networks, and Liga MX — deals that reinforce Genius Sports' position as a critical infrastructure provider rather than simply another betting company.
Ultimately, it seems like sentiment may be largely at play with the recent underperformance, but of course, such a steep and sudden drop is hard to ignore for some investors. That doesn’t necessarily change long-term prospects, though.
Jonathan Ponciano has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Modine Manufacturing. The Motley Fool recommends Genius Sports. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.