Thunderstruck xx said:
How does an offering impact the value of the shares I hold in BBAI?
There is nothing directly sinister about a share offering. Companies raise capital all the time for legitimate business purposes, usually expansion into new products/markets, to make an acquisition, or to shore up cash flow, if needed.
The impact of a share offering is simply bringing in more shares (and shareholders) to divide the company's ownership, earnings, and assets between a larger denominator. Now, if the proceeds of the share sale are put to good use, to "flashplayer" 's point, it can be good for all shareholders, even the ones who now have a smaller percentage of ownership than they did before the offering.
The recent "MEME stock" phenomenon has given rise to an opportunistic share offering by management of the MEME-affected company (think Gamestop, AMC, or others) where they "know" that the current share price is unsupported by financial fundamentals. This is sticking it to existing shareholders, for the most part.
Example: WWR is worth $0.75-$1.00 per share, but news/hype/pump/momentum causes it to rise to triple its' former "normalized value". Management takes advantage of the situation to issue shares at $3.00, and when it retreats back to fair value, there are the same company assets/revenues/profits (well, no revenues or profits in WWR's case) divided between more shares, meaning existing shareholders AND the new shareholders who bought in at a higher price are disadvantaged. Management uses the funds how they see fit, maybe funding bonuses and equity grants a few extra years.
Not saying that's how it goes down with WWR, but there is plenty of precedent elsewhere.