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US SEC Filing Intelligence

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Contract Deobligations Alert β€” March 04, 2026

DHS dominates with $2.3B+ in multi-year shipbuilding and border construction contracts, signaling sustained homeland security spending through 2034. Six bullish signals highlight revenue visibility for prime contractors amid low initial outlays, positioning defense and construction firms for growth. Neutral HHS nonprofit award underscores stable but non-equity scientific funding, with total obligations at $3.84B indicating robust federal commitments.

7 total filings
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Contract Option Exercises β€” March 04, 2026

DHS commands 60%+ of $3.84B total obligations via massive shipbuilding (Bollinger $2.08B, Birdon $106M) and border construction (BCCG $105M) awards, signaling multi-year homeland security capex acceleration through 2034. Six bullish signals dominate across defense manufacturing, construction, and IT/services, with unexercised options adding $500M+ upside potential. Neutral nonprofit HHS award provides minor offset but underscores steady scientific funding amid fixed-price execution risks.

7 total filings
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All HHS Contracts β€” March 04, 2026

HHS deployed $337M in stable funding for CDC reagent supply and CMS Medicare appeals processing, affirming long-term commitment to public health infrastructure through 2026-2029. Bullish for for-profit Maximus with $104M firm-fixed revenue and $17.5M runway; neutral for nonprofit ATCC's $233M cost-plus contract with $257M options upside. Cross-pattern: full/open competition favors established vendors in scientific/admin services, signaling sector resilience amid federal budget continuity.

2 total filings
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Mega Contracts Monitor ($100M+) β€” March 04, 2026

DHS dominates with $2.28B in mega-contracts for shipbuilding (Bollinger $2.08B, Birdon $106M) and border barriers (BCCG $105M), signaling sustained homeland security capex through 2034. Six bullish signals highlight construction and IT/services momentum, with $3.84B total obligations and $1.0B+ in unexercised options for upside. HHS awards ($337M) provide steady health services funding to 2029, though neutral equity impact from nonprofit recipient.

7 total filings
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High-Value Federal Grants ($5M+) β€” March 04, 2026

High-value federal contracts totaling $3.84B over this one-day period underscore DHS dominance with $2.29B in shipbuilding and border security awards to Bollinger ($2.08B), Birdon ($106M), and BCCG ($105M), providing multi-year revenue (up to 2034). Bullish signals prevail (6/7) across defense, IT, construction, and health services, with SAIC ($806M), Brasfield ($407M), and Maximus ($104M) highlighting steady execution ($377M-$383M outlayed). Neutral ATCC ($233M) nonprofit award tempers health sector upside, but unexercised options across portfolio (~$500M+ potential) signal growth amid fixed-price execution risks.

7 total filings
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General Federal Contracts β€” March 04, 2026

DHS dominates with $2.29B (60%) in contracts for Coast Guard shipbuilding and border barriers, signaling multi-year commitments to maritime and border security amid fleet expansion to 58 FRCs and long-term vessel programs. HHS and other agencies add $0.67B in health/IT services and construction, with 6/7 bullish signals driven by high obligations ($3.84B total) and unexercised options up to $0.7B+. Investors should prioritize DHS-exposed shipbuilders and constructors for revenue visibility through 2034, monitoring fixed-price execution risks.

7 total filings
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S&P 500 Consumer Staples Sector SEC Filings β€” March 04, 2026

Across 50 filings from the USA S&P 500 Consumer Staples intelligence stream (broadly including food, beverages, household, and adjacent sectors), overarching themes include heightened governance activity with 12+ proxy statements (DEF 14A/DEFA14A) signaling board refreshes, annual meetings, and shareholder proposals, alongside mixed financial results showing revenue growth in 6/20 reporting companies (avg +30% YoY outliers like Kontoor +21%, Bankwell +25% total revenue) but declines in 7/20 (avg -8% YoY, e.g., Cracker Barrel -7.9%). Margin trends are bifurcated: expansions in 5 companies (ImmuCell +1140bps to 41.4%, Pulmonx Q4 +400bps to 78%) versus compressions in 4 (Kontoor op margin -240bps to 10.7%). Capital allocation leans defensive with steady dividends (Horizon $0.06/month, Helmerich $0.25/quarter) and buybacks (Kontoor repurchased at $67.58 avg), while divestitures (Hain Celestial Snacks sale) and M&A progress (Horizon-Monroe merger) aim to deleverage. Forward-looking catalysts cluster in Q2 2026 (10+ AGMs April-May) and biotech milestones (Cellectar EMA Q3 2026), but cash burns (Cellectar -43% YoY) and net losses (12/25 firms) flag funding risks. Portfolio-level, neutral-mixed sentiment (60% mixed/neutral) implies sector resilience amid consumer pressures, favoring dividend payers and turnaround plays.

25 high priority 25 medium 50 total filings
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S&P 500 Industrials Sector SEC Filings β€” March 04, 2026

Across 69 SEC filings from S&P 500 Industrials and related sectors, dominant themes include mixed financial results with revenue growth in 12/20 key earners (avg +15% YoY, e.g., Black Rock Coffee +24.5%, CPS Technologies +54%) offset by widespread margin compression (avg -150 bps in 8/15 reporters) and net loss expansions (e.g., Ocugen +25%, Rigetti +8%). Biotech and tech firms highlight clinical catalysts (e.g., Ocugen OCU410ST interim Q3 2026, EyePoint DURAVYU topline mid-2026) amid cash burn concerns, while industrials like Babcock & Wilcox show backlog surges (+470% YoY). SPAC activity intensifies with extensions (Goldenstone to Dec 2026) and mergers (Bleichroeder-Pasqal $2B valuation), signaling M&A momentum. Capital allocation leans toward buybacks/dividends (Abercrombie $450M repurchase, Bath & Body $400M) but dilutions via equity raises dilute shareholders (Regen BioPharma +77M shares). Portfolio-level trends flag deteriorating profitability despite top-line resilience, with forward guidance cautious (e.g., Cracker Barrel revenue -2.5-4.5% FY2026). Actionable implications: Favor backlog-rich industrials, monitor biotech catalysts, avoid high-dilution names.

34 high priority 35 medium 69 total filings
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S&P 500 Energy Sector SEC Filings β€” March 04, 2026

Across the four filings in the S&P 500 Energy stream, Hess Midstream LP dominates with positive capital allocation via a $60M accretive repurchase program, signaling strong management conviction and commitment to 5% annual distribution growth through 2028 while preserving $1B in flexibility. Real Brokerage Inc. highlights a pristine balance sheet with zero long-term debt, leases, or liabilities, and 210.5M shares outstanding, underscoring financial stability amid no ICFR changes. BRT Apartments Corp. reports a smooth CFO transition with vesting of 42,800 restricted shares but forfeiture of RSUs, maintaining neutral sentiment. A Paradise Acquisition Corp.'s SPAC pursuit of Enhanced Ltd. reveals mixed sentiment due to high risks like regulatory scrutiny and minimal revenue, contrasting sector peers. No uniform period-over-period trends emerge as filings lack comprehensive financial comparisons, but capital returns and low-debt profiles point to defensive positioning. Key implication: Energy midstream shows shareholder-friendly actions amid limited sector catalysts on March 4, 2026.

3 high priority 1 medium 4 total filings
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S&P 500 Financials Sector SEC Filings β€” March 04, 2026

Across 365 SEC filings from diverse S&P 500 Financials-adjacent sectors (including banks, insurers, healthcare, energy, retail), overarching themes include robust YoY revenue growth averaging +15% in high-materiality filings (e.g., National Vision +9% FY, Viemed +21% FY, BillionToOne +100% FY), but widespread margin compression (-100 to -200 bps YoY in 12/20 key reports like Gran Tierra -37% netback, Grocery Outlet impairments) and mixed profitability with 40% reporting net losses or widened deficits. Capital allocation trends favor shareholder returns (buybacks in 15 filings totaling $500M+, dividends steady/growing in 10 like Horizon $0.18/share Q2), while M&A/refinancings (e.g., Cooper-Standard debt swap, SSR Mining $1.5B asset sale) signal deleveraging. Insider activity sparse but positive conviction in repurchases; forward guidance optimistic for 2026 (revenue +10-40% in 20 filings). Portfolio-level: Healthcare/biotech shows pipeline catalysts (Ocugen Phase 3 topline Q1 2027) offsetting cash burn; energy mixed on production vs. prices; retail impairments flag caution. Actionable: Favor growth names with raised guidance amid macro volatility.

193 high priority 172 medium 365 total filings
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US Material Events SEC 8-K Filings β€” March 04, 2026

Across 77 US SEC filings from March 4, 2026, dominant themes include robust M&A/divestiture activity (12 deals totaling >$5B, e.g., SSR Mining $1.5B sale, Columbus McKinnon $2.7B acquisition), a surge in debt refinancings and equity offerings (25+ financings, e.g., $400M Alliant credit, $550M H2O offering) signaling liquidity needs amid mixed earnings, and high leadership churn (25+ changes, mostly neutral/positive appointments). Period-over-period trends show polarized performance: high-growth outliers like BillionToOne (+113% Q4 YoY revenue, +100% FY) and National Presto (+29.7% FY sales) contrast with decliners like Smith Micro (-20% Q4 YoY revenue) and Aquestive Therapeutics (FY revenue -3%), with average reported revenue growth ~+30% where disclosed but EBITDA/margins mixed (e.g., Babcock & Wilcox +53% Q4 EBITDA). Capital allocation leans toward debt reduction (e.g., Sabre redeemed $91.6M notes) and buybacks (Hess Midstream $60M repurchase), while one bankruptcy (Charles & Colvard) flags distress. Forward-looking catalysts cluster in Q2-Q3 2026 (M&A closes, earnings), with biotech/mining pivots to AI/critical minerals offering upside. Portfolio implications: overweight growth biotech/energy names, monitor small-cap financings for dilution risks, favor M&A active firms for synergies.

77 high priority 77 total filings
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S&P 500 Technology Sector SEC Filings β€” March 04, 2026

Across the 8 filings in the USA S&P 500 Technology intelligence stream, proxy season kicks off prominently with Texas Instruments (TXN) DEF 14A and DEFA14A filings highlighting the April 16, 2026 annual meeting, alongside neutral Nuveen fund proxies, signaling routine governance but no major shifts. Broadcom Inc. dominates with blockbuster Q1 FY2026 results: revenue +29% YoY to $19.3B, AI revenue exploding +106% YoY to $8.4B, and Q2 guidance of $22B (+47% YoY), underscoring semiconductor/AI strength amid sector volatility. ImmuCell shows modest recovery with 2025 sales +4.3% YoY to $27.6M and gross margins expanding +1,140bps to 41.4%, though offset by one-time charges leading to net loss; Nuveen Quality Municipal's VRDP redemption extension to 2056 is a liquidity win. Other filings like NCS Multistage and AParadise SPAC reveal sparse data and high risks, respectively. Portfolio-level trends show YoY revenue acceleration in semis (Broadcom outlier at +29%) vs modest growth elsewhere, with capital returns via Broadcom's new $10B buyback and dividend. Mixed sentiment prevails (3/8 mixed), but AI-driven semis signal outperformance potential amid proxy governance focus.

3 high priority 5 medium 8 total filings
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Nasdaq 100 Stocks SEC Filings β€” March 04, 2026

Across 14 NASDAQ-100 related SEC filings from March 4, 2026, dominant themes include robust semiconductor growth led by Broadcom's 29% YoY revenue surge and 106% AI acceleration, contrasted by mixed biotech results with PepGen narrowing losses but facing FDA holds and ImmuCell achieving 41.4% gross margins (up from 30%) despite net losses from write-downs. Proxy season kicks off with TXN and Nuveen funds scheduling April 16 meetings, signaling governance focus amid stable capital structures like NAD's VRDP redemption extension to 2056. Shipping (Costamare) shows long-term charter stability with TEU-weighted durations up to 6.9 years, while SPACs (AParadise) highlight high-risk combinations. Portfolio-level trends reveal 3/5 companies with revenue growth averaging 27% YoY (Broadcom, ImmuCell, AITX implied), margin expansions in ops-heavy firms (+1,140bps for ImmuCell), but persistent net losses in biotechs (PepGen -4% YoY op ex decline). Capital returns shine via Broadcom's $10B buyback and dividend, positioning AI/semicon as outperformers vs. biotech underperformers on cash burn. Implications favor rotating into semis/AI catalysts while monitoring biotech clinical risks and proxy outcomes for governance shifts.

6 high priority 8 medium 14 total filings
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Dow Jones 30 Stocks SEC Filings β€” March 04, 2026

Across 121 SEC filings from diverse US companies (despite DJ30 focus, spanning retail, healthcare, energy, tech, and industrials), overarching themes include mixed financial results with 22/45 quantifiable revenue reporters showing YoY growth averaging +15% (e.g., Republic Airways +20.6%, Veeva +16%), but 12 experiencing declines averaging -8% (e.g., Cracker Barrel -7.9%, Bath & Body Works -2%), driven by margin compression in retail (-150bps avg in 5 cos) and consumer weakness offset by M&A-fueled gains. Capital allocation leans bullish with 9 share repurchase programs (e.g., Innovative $100M, National Vision $50M renewed), debt reductions (e.g., Republic $231.6M repaid), and dividends maintained/raised (e.g., Global Water $0.30396 annualized), signaling management conviction amid 15 guidance issuances mostly maintained/raised for 2026. Insider activity is sparse but positive where noted (e.g., no major sales); M&A/divestitures active in 12 filings (e.g., Ziff Davis sale to Accenture, Diversified Energy $245M acquisition). Critical developments: 2 bankruptcies/delistings (Charles & Colvard Ch11, Vicarious NYSE delisting), but portfolio-level trends show improving cash flows (15/25 with data up YoY) and backlog growth (e.g., Orion +470% implied via Babcock). Implications: Rotate to growth sectors like healthcare/tech (avg +12% revenue) from retail; monitor Q1 2026 catalysts for alpha.

65 high priority 56 medium 121 total filings
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US SEC Filings Daily Market Digest β€” March 04, 2026

Across 433 SEC filings for March 4, 2026, mixed sentiment prevails with 60% of 10-Ks showing revenue growth (avg +12% YoY) but frequent margin compression (-120 bps avg in consumer/retail) and widened losses in 45% of cases, driven by SG&A surges (+25% avg YoY) and impairments. Consumer-facing firms like Kontoor Brands (+21% revenue YoY via acquisitions) and National Vision (+9% revenue, +56% adj op income) outperform, while energy producers like Gran Tierra (+32% production YoY but -23% EBITDA) and Xponential Fitness (flat SSS, -2% revenue) lag amid cost pressures. Capital allocation leans shareholder-friendly with buybacks/dividends in 25% of filings (e.g., Kontoor $25M remaining auth, News Corp $1B program), but dilution risks rise (US Energy 19% new shares). M&A/divestitures active (SSR Mining $1.5B sale, Ziff Davis asset sale), SPAC/de-SPAC momentum builds (Pelican, Haymaker), and financing abundant (Applied Digital $2.15B notes). Forward guidance cautious but positive in healthcare/tech (National Vision $107-133M adj op inc FY26). Portfolio trend: Rotate to margin-resilient growth (e.g., Cricut +26% op income) away from cyclical retail/energy.

215 high priority 218 medium 433 total filings
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S&P 500 Consumer Discretionary Sector SEC Filings β€” March 04, 2026

Across 69 filings from S&P 500 Consumer Discretionary and adjacent sectors, overarching themes include mixed revenue growth with top-line expansion in 7/15 retail/fitness firms (avg +10% YoY, e.g., Black Rock Coffee +24.5%, Abercrombie +6%) offset by widespread margin compression (avg -150bps across 9 reporters) and operational losses; capital returns remain robust with buybacks/dividends in 8 firms (e.g., Abercrombie $450M repurchase, Brown-Forman $400M). M&A/divestitures active (Ziff Davis sale to Accenture, Farmer Bros acquisition at $1.29/share), alongside leadership transitions signaling AI/strategic pivots (FactSet AI officers). Period-over-period trends show YoY revenue growth in 12/25 quantified filers (+avg 8%) but net income declines in 10/20 (-avg 25%), with forward guidance cautious (e.g., Abercrombie 3-5% sales growth FY26). Portfolio-level patterns flag consumer resilience in apparel/restaurants but vulnerability in fitness/specialty retail amid cost pressures; actionable now: prioritize buyback-heavy names pre-AGMs.

38 high priority 31 medium 69 total filings
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S&P 500 Healthcare Sector SEC Filings β€” March 04, 2026

Across 30 filings in the USA S&P 500 Healthcare stream (with broader financial/REIT inclusions), dominant themes include clinical progress in biotech/oncology (Citius 86% ORR Phase 1, Cellectar Q3 2026 EMA submission) offsetting cash burns (-43% at Cellectar to $13.2M), mixed revenue trends (Niagen +30% YoY to $129.4M, Sight Sciences -3% to $77.4M), and strong financial recoveries (Bankwell net income +260% YoY to $35.2M, First Financial +67.5% to $79.2M). Period-over-period highlights: NII surges avg +50% YoY in banks (Alerus +61.1%), provisions down sharply (Bankwell -95%), but deposits -3-4% across lenders and op ex rises (Niagen Q4 +59%). Capital allocation shows dividend hikes (First Financial to $2.04/share) vs constrained buybacks (Procaccianti prorated 3.6%). Forward-looking catalysts cluster mid-2026 (Cellectar Phase 1b data, Sight Sciences 6-14% revenue growth to $82-88M). No insider buys/sells detailed, but director resignations (MVB over governance) flag concerns. Implications: Bullish oncology combos and bank turnarounds; bearish dilution/funding risks in biotechs; monitor 2026 guidance execution for alpha.

12 high priority 18 medium 30 total filings
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Global High-Priority Regulatory Events β€” March 04, 2026

Across 237 filings in the Global High Priority Market Events stream (US SEC focus, March 4, 2026), dominant themes include debt refinancings (e.g., Cooper-Standard $1.1B lower-cost notes), M&A/divestitures (SSR Mining $1.5B sale, Ziff Davis to Accenture), and distress signals like bankruptcies (Charles & Colvard Chapter 11) and insolvencies (TV Vision β‚Ή294Cr petition). Period-over-period trends show mixed revenue growth (avg +8% YoY in reporting 10-Ks like National Vision +9%, Kontoor +21%, but declines in Xponential -2%, Sensus -34%) with widespread margin compression (e.g., 6/12 consumer firms -100-200bps avg due to SG&A rises) offset by cost savings in refinancings. Insider activity sparse but positive (Bondada promoter +0.003% stake), capital allocation leans to buybacks/dividends (Kontoor $25M remaining, Horizon $0.18 Q2 2026), while forward guidance highlights AI catalysts (Alnylam 2029 vesting at $500-800 stock price). Portfolio-level patterns flag energy/mining outperformance (Gran Tierra prod +38% YoY) vs retail weakness (Cracker Barrel rev -7.9% QoQ), with regulatory fines (BF Utilities β‚Ή5.43L) and delistings (Vicarious NYSE suspension) amplifying volatility. Implications: Opportunistic buys in refinanced industrials, avoid distress names; monitor Q1 earnings for margin recovery.

237 high priority 237 total filings
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US IPO Pipeline SEC S-1 Filings β€” March 04, 2026

The IPO Pipeline stream features a single S-1 filing from Transglobal Management Group, Inc. (TMGI), formerly Marquie Group, Inc., a Florida-based radio broadcasting company registering securities for a potential public offering on March 4, 2026. Balance sheets are disclosed for fiscal years ending May 31, 2023, 2024, and 2025, indicating multi-year financial tracking amid extensive related-party transactions (payables to CEO's wife and mother) and numerous notes payable/convertible notes, with no specific revenue or net income metrics provided. Neutral sentiment reflects operational complexity without overt bullish or bearish indicators, but high materiality (8/10) underscores significance for IPO trackers. Period-over-period balance sheet disclosures suggest stability sufficient for IPO pursuit, though heavy debt and related-party exposure signal governance risks in the radio sector. Key implications include potential new public float for liquidity-seeking investors, dilution risks from convertibles, and a catalyst for monitoring SEC review process in a niche media IPO landscape.

1 high priority 1 total filings
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US Earnings Financial Results SEC Filings β€” March 04, 2026

Across 74 SEC filings primarily 10-Ks for FY2025, US companies showed mixed financial results with 42/74 reporting revenue growth (avg +12% YoY where specified), but 51/74 had net losses or widened losses, driven by impairments (e.g., Grocery Outlet $149M goodwill, Oil States $100M), margin compression (avg -150bps in 28 cos), and rising SG&A (up avg 15% in 35 cos). Energy firms like Gran Tierra (-30% prices, $136M impairment) and Ring Energy (negative gas prices) faced commodity headwinds, while finance (e.g., First Financial NII +25.6%, Unity ROA 2.17%) and select biotech (Keros revenue +6772%, SCYNEXIS +450%) outperformed. Capital allocation leaned defensive with buybacks (e.g., Kontoor $25M, Daktronics $22.8M) and dividends steady, but debt reductions (Oil States to $1.7M) signal deleveraging. Portfolio trends highlight retail weakness (comp sales flat/-5% avg in 5 cos) vs. resilience in niche growth like Red Violet (+20% rev). Implications: Favor financials/biotech turnarounds, avoid energy/retail amid cost pressures; watch Q1 2026 earnings for guidance updates.

74 high priority 74 total filings