I think you may be correct, Jimmy. Although I think we would likely test the all time low of about 5 cents, (when the total number of shares was only 300 million) regardless of the dilution.
As I demonstrated in one of my earlier posts (which was never commented on), when the number of shares of LQMT contracted by 50%, the stock price actually fell. If your reasoning held, the price should have doubled. My contention is that normal rules do not yet apply to this company.
I don't expect to see any rise in price until 1) the company reports real earnings, or 2) there is another Apple rumor that spurs a price run up by those who still do not understand the agreement between Apple and LQMT and believe LQMT will gain revenue from Apple's use of Liquidmetal alloys.