A prospectus supplement is an additional document provided alongside a company's main offering details, offering updated or extra information about a specific financial product being sold. It helps investors understand the latest terms, risks, and details of the investment, similar to how an update or revision clarifies or expands on original instructions, ensuring they have current and complete information before making a decision.
reverse stock splitfinancial
A reverse stock split reduces a company's number of outstanding shares while raising the price per share proportionally, so the total value of each investor's holding is unchanged; a 1-for-10 split turns 100 shares worth $1 each into 10 shares worth $10 each. Companies often do this to regain compliance with an exchange's minimum price rule or to attract investors who avoid very low-priced stocks.
going concernfinancial
Going concern is the accounting assumption that a company will keep operating and meeting its obligations for the foreseeable future. The phrase matters most when a company or its auditors disclose substantial doubt about it, a formal warning that the business may not have enough resources to continue without raising money, restructuring, or selling assets. That language in a filing or press release signals elevated financial risk.
best-efforts offeringfinancial
A best-efforts offering is a way of selling new securities where the broker or underwriter agrees to try to sell as many shares or bonds as possible but does not promise to buy any unsold portion. For investors, it matters because the issuer bears the risk of weak demand — the deal may raise less money or the price may be more volatile, similar to hiring a salesperson who will try hard to sell your goods but won’t guarantee any specific sales.
lock-up agreementsfinancial
A lock-up agreement is a contract that prevents company insiders—founders, employees, and early investors—from selling their shares for a set period after a public stock offering. It matters to investors because it keeps a large block of shares off the market temporarily; when the lock-up ends, those holders can sell and this increased supply can cause the stock price to fall, similar to a timed release that suddenly opens a valve.
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IRVINE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Mobix Labs, Inc. (Nasdaq: MOBX) reported new and expanded activity tied to the F-22 Raptor program, including a new customer and increased demand from an existing partner.
The combined activity reflects approximately a five-fold increase in component orders, with production underway supporting upcoming deliveries in 2026.
Forward-Looking Statements
This release includes forward-looking statements regarding production, shipments, and program activity. Actual results may differ materially due to risks and uncertainties described in Mobix Labs’ SEC filings.