MCLEAN, Va., May 11, 2026, 11:12 EDT
- Dorothy Hayes unloaded 15,000 shares of BigBear.ai at $4.105 apiece, leaving her with 204,150 shares in her portfolio.
- BigBear.ai filed just days after reporting a larger backlog and sticking to its 2026 revenue forecast.
- Execution on government-funded AI contracts—not the director’s sale—is still the core risk here.
Director Dorothy D. Hayes unloaded 15,000 BigBear.ai Holdings shares on May 8, pocketing $61,575 just after the defense AI firm disclosed a bigger backlog but left its yearly sales forecast unchanged. According to a Form 4, Hayes got $4.105 per share and kept 204,150 shares following the sale.
The timing of the disclosure comes as BigBear.ai works to shore up investor faith following choppy revenues and sizable losses, even as it promotes itself as a leaner, public-market play on AI for sectors like defense, intel, border security, and trade. Shares of BBAI were trading near $4.18, per Investing.com, down 27% over the past six months despite showing some recent momentum.
First-quarter revenue landed at $34.4 million, slipping 1% year-over-year, but gross margin jumped to 34.0% from last year’s 21.3%. The company’s backlog climbed 14% sequentially to $281.9 million, with a $53 million sole-source classified deal playing a big role. BigBear.ai kept its full-year 2026 revenue outlook at $135 million to $165 million.
Chief Executive Kevin McAleenan pointed to nearly $75 million in first-quarter gains, saying those results “keep us on track” for the 2026 revenue goal. Chief Financial Officer Sean Ricker singled out “strong gross margin expansion” tied to generative AI revenue—highlighting AI tech that produces text, analysis or other outputs from data and prompts. BigBear.ai Holdings, Inc.
Insiders report changes to their beneficial ownership on Form 4, the SEC’s required disclosure for these transactions. According to the agency, directors, officers, and anyone holding over 10% of a registered equity class typically have two business days to file most trades in company shares.
Hayes sold roughly 6.8% of her earlier direct stake, according to Asatu News, which labeled the move a routine sale. Afterward, her remaining shares came to an estimated $839,056 at the transaction price.
The filing doesn’t spell out Hayes’ motive for selling. Marked with transaction code “S” for sale, it offered no remarks giving context, and Meyka pointed out the SEC document was silent on any reason. Meyka
BigBear.ai is still dwarfed by Palantir Technologies—the name that typically dominates talk of government AI and data-analytics contractors—but both come up when investors look at AI platforms serving the public sector. As of Monday, BigBear.ai’s market cap hovered near $2.0 billion. That’s a fraction of Palantir’s roughly $347 billion valuation, and also ahead of peer C3.ai, which came in around $1.36 billion.
But here’s the catch: BigBear.ai’s 10-Q makes it clear the bulk of its revenue is still tied to federal contracts. The company flagged exposure to shifts in U.S. government funding, procurement agendas, budget sign-offs, and possible program holdups. For the first quarter, $29.9 million out of $34.4 million in total revenue came straight from U.S. government sources.
So investors are juggling a couple of signals here: a director cashing out some shares, while management highlights a rising backlog, lower interest costs, and more money coming in from generative AI products. The real question now is timing—will those deals actually drive revenue quickly enough to shrink losses, or just keep fueling the narrative around defense AI?