NEW YORK, Jan 2, 2026, 08:21 ET — Premarket
- BigBear.ai shares down 1.7% premarket at $5.40
- Company closes $250 million all-cash acquisition of Ask Sage
- Shareholders vote Jan. 22 on doubling authorized common shares
BigBear.ai Holdings, Inc. shares fell 1.7% to $5.40 in premarket trading on Friday, after the company closed its $250 million acquisition of Ask Sage. The stock last closed at about $5.50.
BigBear.ai said late Wednesday it completed the all-cash purchase of Ask Sage for $250 million, adding a platform that runs generative AI — systems that can create text and other content — in secure, regulated environments. Ask Sage supports more than 100,000 users across 16,000 government teams, and BigBear.ai said the deal accelerates its push to deploy AI at scale in sensitive settings. CEO Kevin McAleenan called the acquisition “a significant milestone” for the company. BigBear.ai Holdings, Inc.
The timing matters because federal agencies and defense contractors have been trying to move AI from pilots into production, where data access and audit trails can be deal-breakers. BigBear.ai is betting Ask Sage’s tools for secure deployment — and “agentic” features, meaning software that can plan and take actions toward a goal — will help it win work in tightly controlled networks.
A separate issue on investors’ radar is the company’s capital flexibility. A Dec. 30 filing showed BigBear.ai will reconvene a special meeting on Jan. 22 to seek approval to increase its authorized common shares to 1 billion from 500 million, which it said would provide headroom for financing and retention awards. BigBear.ai Holdings, Inc.
In a Nov. 10 earnings release filed with the SEC, BigBear.ai said Ask Sage was expected to generate about $25 million in 2025 annual recurring revenue (ARR), a subscription-style metric that tracks repeatable sales. In the same filing, BigBear.ai projected 2025 revenue of $125 million to $140 million and reported cash of $456.6 million as of Sept. 30. Revenue fell 20% year-on-year in the third quarter, the company said, after some Army program volumes slowed. SEC
With the purchase now complete, traders will look for signs the combined business can grow recurring revenue without dragging margins. The cash price also puts a spotlight on liquidity and whether BigBear.ai needs to raise funds this year.
AI-linked software names were also lower ahead of the open, offering little support for smaller-cap movers. Palantir Technologies, C3.ai and SoundHound AI were down between about 0.7% and 2.5% in premarket trading.
BigBear.ai has framed Ask Sage as a way to broaden beyond legacy analytics programs into secure generative AI workflows. Investors will be looking for evidence of cross-selling — getting existing government customers to adopt the new platform — and for new contract awards that validate demand.
The Jan. 22 vote adds a potential catalyst that can shape how the market prices in future dilution risk. The filing said the added share capacity could support financing and strategic initiatives, but it did not announce any immediate stock sale.
In the near term, investors are likely to focus on what the company discloses about Ask Sage’s revenue contribution and retention metrics once results catch up with the acquisition. Any update on ARR trends will matter because it is often treated as a proxy for the durability of software revenue.