That may be good for the company, but not the investor. As an investor you want as few a number of Outstanding Shares as possible - which, in theory, keeps your monetary stake in your investment as high as it can possibly be, at any time that everything else is at comparable level of stability.
If a company has, for example, 100,000 Outstanding Shares and you buy one, you (basically) own 1/100,000th of that company - then next week all remains the same at the company (nothing happens that increases the VALUE of that company) except the company dilutes and suddenly there are 1,000,000 Outstanding Shares you own 1/1,000,000th of that company - or 1/10th of the stake you owned last week. (which is even worse when companies get into diluting BILLIONS of Outstanding Shares)
Sort of like a pie... If the size and value of a pie (as a whole) remains the same and it is cut into smaller pieces, each piece is worth less than if that pie had been cut into larger pieces.
SO... GAG THE TA, SO NO ONE REALLY KNOWS!