The share price typically would not fully react on a "general" announcement to authorize additional shares. In TAUG's case this means little or no share price adjustment until the 80% increase in the authorized share count begins to actually be used to support the business, i.e. the shares become "OUTSTANDING" rather than only "AUTHORIZED." It is doubtful, but theoretically possible, the 800 million newly authorized shares could remain "authorized" forever, thus causing no additional shareholder dilution, meaning no impact on the share price. If only 200 million are used, i.e. becoming outstanding, the dilution is not the same as using all 800 million of the new shares. At this point, any share price impact is very much a moving target.