Track private investments in public equity, registered direct offerings, and equity raises. See deal size, price per share, attached warrants, and dilution impact — extracted from SEC 8-K filings using AI.
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A Private Investment in Public Equity (PIPE) is when institutional investors buy shares directly from a public company, usually at a discount to market price. Companies use PIPEs for fast capital raises without the lengthy public offering process. The discount and new shares dilute existing holders.
Similar to PIPEs but shares are registered with the SEC for immediate resale. This means buyers can sell into the open market right away, often creating heavy selling pressure. Watch for large RDOs relative to daily trading volume.
Many PIPE deals include warrants as a "sweetener" — giving investors the right to buy additional shares later at a set price. This creates a second wave of dilution when warrants exercise, often months after the initial deal announcement.
Convertible notes let investors lend money that converts to shares at a set (or floating) price. "Toxic" convertibles with floating conversion prices create a death spiral — as the price drops, more shares are created, pushing it lower. These are the most dangerous dilution events.
This page updates as new 8-K filings are processed. Want real-time alerts the moment a company you own announces a private placement or equity raise? DilutionWatch monitors SEC filings around the clock.
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