Image source: Getty Images.

What happened

bluebid bio (BLUE -4.91%) ended the day down 10.7% after raising approximately $250 million selling shares in a secondary offering.

So what

Companies usually trade lower after a secondary offering, since the dilution means shareholders now own a smaller portion of the company. But a decline of more than 10% is a bit of a surprise, considering the deal terms. For instance, the $250 million worth of shares Bluebird sold was 25% more than the $200 million the biotech stated it hoped to raise in its announcement yesterday after the bell. And at $76 per share, the offering was only a slight discount to the $78.95 that Bluebird closed at yesterday. Clearly, there were plenty of large institutional investors interested in getting their hands on blocks of shares.

Unfortunately, the knowledge that institutional investors were willing to pay $76 per share wasn't enough to keep shares near that level.

Of course, investors should keep today's decline in context. It traded lower than today's closing price as recently as last Thursday. And one of the reasons Bluebird's management raised capital yesterday was because the shares had reached their highest level of the year.

Part of today's decline could also be caused by President-elect Donald Trump's comment in a Time magazine article about drug pricing. "I'm going to bring down drug prices," Trump said. "I don't like what has happened with drug prices." The iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology ETF (IBB -0.20%) was down almost 3% on the day, with companies such as bluebird that have run up recently leading the industry's list of decliners.

Now what

bluebird bio doesn't really need the cash right now, with over $725 million in the bank at the end of the third quarter. But the old adage that biotechs should raise capital when they can and not when they need to applies here. And with shares at a high for the year, now seems like a good time for the biotech to pad its wallet.