NEW YORK, June 3, 2026, 11:05 EDT
- BigBear.ai shares gave up roughly 6% Wednesday morning, easing after a retail-driven rally and their strongest week since last summer.
- BigBear.ai shares picked up again after news of a cargo-security rollout in Panama, though first-quarter revenue barely moved and the company still posted a steep loss.
- Now the question is if backlog and defense-AI demand will climb fast enough to keep the market cap over $2 billion.
BigBear.ai shares slipped in New York on Wednesday, pulling back after a recent rally. Investors looked at a new cargo-security contract, but concerns about flat revenue, ongoing cash burn and a steep valuation pressured the stock. Shares last changed hands at $4.80, down around 6%. The company’s market cap stands near $2.27 billion.
BigBear.ai is now in focus as a gauge for how smaller AI stocks trade on contract news without clear proof of lasting sales growth. Shares jumped 20.6% last week, their biggest rise in eight months, after the Panama launch and more retail interest brought traders back.
BigBear.ai said Panama Transshipment Group has agreed to use its International Shipping Compliance cargo-security app, marking the first commercial customer. The Panama-based logistics operator will use the tool, developed with Narval, to track cargo handlers and flag changes to shipments using biometrics and analytics.
Troy Miller, who served as acting commissioner at U.S. Customs and Border Protection and joined BigBear.ai in March, said the deployment matters since customs officers “can only physically inspect a fraction of global cargo.” Narval chairman Mario Pérez Balladares said Panama’s trade position means the partnership is a move for better supply-chain security. BigBear.ai Holdings, Inc.
BigBear.ai turned in a first-quarter net loss of $56.8 million as revenue dipped 1% to $34.4 million. Gross margin, though, improved to 34.0% thanks to more sales of higher-margin generative AI products from Ask Sage, which BigBear.ai bought at the end of 2025. Generative AI is software that creates or analyzes content with large models.
BigBear.ai’s CEO Kevin McAleenan told investors in May that the company’s first-quarter gains of almost $75 million keep it headed toward the 2026 revenue goal. CFO Sean Ricker said generative AI revenue is giving the company “strong gross margin expansion.” BigBear.ai Holdings, Inc.
The valuation debate is still going. Byte Sized Alpha, writing on Seeking Alpha, put out a sell call on Tuesday and set a $3.76 price target. The author wrote that flat revenue and widening losses don’t support the stock’s premium. Dilution was also mentioned, with BigBear.ai’s average basic share count jumping to roughly 473.1 million in Q1 from around 252.3 million last year.
Options trading didn’t show much one-way excitement either. The Fly, via TipRanks, noted that BigBear.ai options volume looked about average on Tuesday. Calls stayed ahead of puts, but the skew increased, which points to more traders looking for downside cover. Options let traders make bets or hedge moves in a stock.
BigBear.ai’s backlog climbed to $281.9 million as of March 31, giving bulls a new number to work with. That’s up from $248.1 million at the end of 2025. The total includes $79.1 million funded and $81.0 million unfunded.
Backlog doesn’t equal revenue. In its latest quarterly filing, BigBear.ai said most of its historical revenue comes from its federal government clients. The company said contracts often aren’t fully funded at the start, and some government customers may end contracts for convenience. Fights over funding, delays in procurement, or changing priorities at agencies could slow things down fast.
Palantir, C3.ai, Leidos and Booz Allen Hamilton are all in the mix for defense, intelligence and government analytics contracts. These firms go after similar markets but aren’t the same size and their profits vary. Shares of Palantir, C3.ai, Leidos and Booz Allen were also down Wednesday morning.
BigBear.ai is still seen as a contract-recovery play and a speculative AI stock. The Panama project gives the company a new commercial example to point to. But investors want to see if these deals bring in revenue quicker, cut losses, and reduce its need for investor patience.