Direct Digital Holdings Inc. (DRCT) had a rough Wednesday evening, with shares dropping 13.9% in after-hours trading to $0.13. That's not exactly the kind of movement you want to see when you're already trading at penny stock levels.
The Texas-based advertising technology company had closed regular trading at $0.15, down 1.41%, before the real selling kicked in after the bell.
The Settlement That Spooked Investors
Here's what triggered the sell-off: Direct Digital filed a Form 8-K with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday, revealing a settlement agreement reached last week with Continuation Capital Inc. The deal resolves claims related to third-party vendor payables totaling $3.02 million that had been assigned to Continuation Capital.
Settlements sound good in theory, but the devil's in the details. And these details involve substantial share dilution.
Dilution on Unfavorable Terms
Under the settlement terms, Direct Digital will issue up to 50 million Class A common shares to Continuation Capital. To put that in perspective, the company's entire market capitalization is just $4.4 million.
The exchange price mechanism isn't doing shareholders any favors either. Shares will be issued at 76% of whichever is lower: the volume-weighted average sale price over a five-day valuation period, or the average of the four lowest closing prices from the most recent five days in that period. That's a built-in discount on top of already depressed prices.
The company also issued 95,000 Class A shares as a settlement fee. A court hearing held the day after the settlement was entered determined that the agreement is fair to Continuation Capital.
A Year to Forget
This latest development compounds what's already been a disastrous year for Direct Digital. The stock has cratered 90.77% year-to-date, trading in a 52-week range of $0.12 to $6.59. The company that once commanded a share price above $6 now sits at a market cap of $4.4 million.
Market data indicates that DRCT stock has a negative price trend across all time frames, reflecting the sustained pressure on shares.