Yes, that's what a negative rotation period would indicate. This case looks a bit special because its orbital period and rotational period have the same absolute value (if the sign was the same too, the planet would be tidally locked, this way it just is not).
Assuming the "day" is 24 hours (86400 seconds to use a proper unit), the planet would complete an orbit around its parent body (which is not necessarily the star determining its day/night cycle) in 50.4 hours, and complete a rotation around its axis opposite its orbital motion in the same time. Assuming it is orbiting "its star", a local day, e.g., measured from noon to noon would only be half a rotation, so fun enough, that planet would have a ~25.2 hours long day cycle. If it wasn't a molten hellhole, it could be quite nice.