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US SEC Filing Intelligence

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All NASA Contracts — May 28, 2026

This digest covers a single $51.4M NASA contract awarded to AGILE DECISION SCIENCES, LLC, a subsidiary of the ARCTIC SLOPE REGIONAL CORPORATION, for administrative and IT support services at NASA Headquarters. The contract is entirely civilian, with zero defense-related exposure, and carries a bullish signal strength of 7/10. The highest-conviction signal is the stable, recurring revenue stream through 2026 under a cost-plus-fixed-fee structure, which limits margin upside but provides predictable cash flows. A key risk is the concentration of this revenue within the parent company's portfolio and the eventual expiration of 8(a) program eligibility, which could increase competitive pressure on future awards.

1 total filings
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S&P 500 Technology Sector SEC Filings — May 28, 2026

The 18 filings reveal a bifurcated S&P 500 Technology landscape: enterprise software giants like Salesforce and Autodesk show robust revenue growth (13-18% YoY) and margin expansion, while quantum computing players (Pasqal, IBM) signal aggressive capital deployment. Key themes include heavy share repurchases at Salesforce ($27B in Q1) driving equity declines, Autodesk's $3.6B acquisition of MaintainX to expand into operations, and IBM's $10B quantum investment. Mixed signals emerge from insider activity (no major trades) and shareholder votes (notable opposition at Verizon, Esquire). The sector shows strong cash generation but rising debt levels, with Salesforce's debt surging to $39B. A catalyst calendar includes Pasqal's SPAC merger closing, Autodesk's acquisition close, and IBM's quantum milestones.

10 high priority 8 medium 18 total filings
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Nasdaq 100 Stocks SEC Filings — May 28, 2026

The 15 filings from NASDAQ-100 constituents and related entities on May 28, 2026, reveal a mixed but cautiously optimistic market landscape. A key theme is aggressive capital management, exemplified by Sun Communities' new $1B buyback and Kennametal's debt refinancing, while M&A activity continues in financials and real estate. In healthcare, Immunic's mixed Phase 2 data for multiple sclerosis provides a nuanced outlook, balanced by Intuitive Surgical's positive leadership transition. Costco's strong Q3 results (11.6% YoY revenue growth) are tempered by adjusted comps of 6.6%, highlighting transitory tailwinds. Regulatory and corporate governance developments, including Verizon's shareholder meeting and NexMetals' unanimous approvals, show strong insider alignment. The overall sentiment reflects active portfolio restructuring and strategic positioning, with period comparisons showing notable revenue growth in consumer sectors but caution in clinical-stage biotech.

7 high priority 8 medium 15 total filings
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S&P 500 Financials Sector SEC Filings — May 28, 2026

The 50 filings from S&P 500 Financials and related sectors reveal a mixed landscape: while some companies like Salesforce and Burlington Stores show strong revenue and earnings growth, others like ZRCN and Investcorp AI Acquisition Corp report widening losses and cash depletion. Period-over-period comparisons highlight margin compression in industrials (Photronics, Hormel Foods) and retail (Build-A-Bear), offset by tariff refunds and cost-cutting. Insider activity is limited, but capital allocation trends show aggressive buybacks (Salesforce, Dollar Tree) and debt-funded M&A (GameStop). Forward-looking data points to catalysts in quantum computing (IBM), SPAC mergers (Cartesian Growth, NewHold), and regulatory milestones (ENDRA Life Sciences). Key risks include dilution from private placements (Hyperscale Data, Nature's Miracle) and shareholder dissent on governance (Yum China, COMPASS Pathways). Overall, the digest identifies 10 bullish signals, 9 risk flags, 10 opportunities, 5 sector themes, and 8 watch list items.

29 high priority 21 medium 50 total filings
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S&P 500 Consumer Staples Sector SEC Filings — May 28, 2026

The 50 filings for the S&P 500 Consumer Staples sector reveal a sector bifurcating between scale-driven growth and margin pressure. Costco's 11.6% revenue surge and Hormel's 3% organic growth highlight the resilience of large-cap staples, but both show underlying margin compression from input costs and mix shifts. The most critical development is the activist-driven board refresh at lululemon, signaling potential strategic shifts. A clear theme is capital discipline, with buyback authorizations from El Pollo Loco ($40M) and Ambarella ($50M) alongside debt refinancing at Hexcel and Kinder Morgan, indicating a focus on shareholder returns and balance sheet optimization. However, the sector is not immune to risk, as seen in the debt restructuring at Nature's Miracle and the settlement at Celularity, which underscore financial strain in smaller players. The forward-looking data is sparse, but the few guidance items, like Hormel's lowered EPS outlook, suggest caution. Overall, the sector presents a 'growth with caution' narrative, favoring companies with strong pricing power and efficient capital allocation.

18 high priority 32 medium 50 total filings
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S&P 500 Industrials Sector SEC Filings — May 28, 2026

The 50 filings from S&P 500 Industrials and related sectors reveal a bifurcated market: high-growth tech and aerospace companies (Dell, Autodesk, Howmet) are reporting record revenues and strong forward guidance, while consumer-facing and legacy industrial firms (Hormel, American Eagle, Photronics) show margin compression and mixed results. A significant theme is the aggressive capital allocation towards M&A and buybacks, with Autodesk's $3.6B acquisition of MaintainX and Hyatt's $1.0B buyback authorization standing out. However, this optimism is tempered by notable risk flags, including a Nasdaq deficiency notice for Lulu's Fashion Lounge, a default notice for Schmitt Industries, and a CEO resignation at the same firm, highlighting financial distress in smaller caps. Insider activity is sparse but includes a significant retention program at Karyopharm, suggesting a focus on talent retention. Overall, the portfolio shows strong revenue growth in tech-enabled industrials (Dell +88% YoY, Autodesk +18% YoY) but persistent margin pressures from product mix shifts and input costs, with several companies guiding cautiously for the remainder of 2026.

21 high priority 29 medium 50 total filings
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S&P 500 Energy Sector SEC Filings — May 28, 2026

Across five S&P 500 Energy-related filings, the dominant themes are consolidation & scale (Devon/Coterra merger), capital structure optimization (Kinder Morgan credit extension), and continued LNG expansion (Cheniere EPC award) juxtaposed with distressed micro-cap restructuring (Hallmark). Period comparisons show material outperformance at Devon (2025 oil volumes above top guidance and improved capital efficiency vs industry averages) and continued balance-sheet resilience at midstream (Kinder Morgan extending credit maturity to 2031). Forward catalysts cluster in 2H26–early-2027 (Devon merger vote/close processes, Cheniere FID and regulatory approvals). Insider and institutional position data are sparse but show stable institutional energy exposure (Challenger 13F holds Exxon $4.78M, Chevron $3.89M) and no alarmingly adverse insider sales in the large caps. Capital allocation is bifurcated: M&A and reinvestment (Devon merger synergies target $1B by 2027; Cheniere capex push) versus conservative liquidity management (Kinder Morgan keeps facility size unchanged but materially ups swingline availability). Net: prioritize Devon and Cheniere as growth/catalyst plays, treat Kinder Morgan as credit/defensive liquidity story, and avoid Hallmark absent structural revenue turnaround.

3 high priority 2 medium 5 total filings
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US Material Events SEC 8-K Filings — May 28, 2026

The 50 filings reveal a mixed landscape with significant M&A activity (Caesars, Autodesk, Axalta/Akzo Nobel), capital market transactions (Sidus Space $100M offering, Polaryx $10M PIPE), and debt refinancings (Kinder Morgan, Hexcel). Period-over-period trends show margin compression in hospitality (Ashford Trust $60.7M Q1 loss) and energy (TXO Partners pro forma net loss of $74.3M), while tech-focused companies like MaintainX (>50% ARR growth) show strong momentum. Insider activity is limited but notable: multiple director resignations (Beeline, Hanmi, Schmitt Industries) and CFO departures (Cineverse, UGI). Forward-looking catalysts include the Caesars acquisition (Q3 2026), Autodesk/MaintainX close (FY2026), and Polaryx Phase 2 trial initiation. Capital allocation trends favor debt reduction (Red Robin, PBF Energy) and share buybacks (MAXIMUS). Key risks include Nasdaq non-compliance (ENDRA Life Sciences), heavy dilution (Hyperscale Data, Nature's Miracle), and regulatory delays (Etsy/eBay deal). Overall, the digest highlights a focus on balance sheet strengthening and strategic repositioning amid mixed sector performance.

50 high priority 50 total filings
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Dow Jones 30 Stocks SEC Filings — May 28, 2026

The 50 filings reveal a mixed landscape for Dow 30 and related companies. Revenue growth is robust in tech (Salesforce +13.3% YoY, Marvell +27.6% YoY, Ambarella +16.9% YoY), but margins are under pressure due to investment and cost inflation. Insider activity is limited, but notable insider selling at Marvell (CEO sold $1.2M) and insider buying at IBM (CEO bought $500K) signal divergent management conviction. Capital allocation shows aggressive buybacks at Salesforce ($27.4B in Q1) and new repurchase programs at El Pollo Loco ($40M) and Ambarella ($50M). M&A activity is significant, with Devon-Coterra merger targeting $1B synergies and Two Harbors acquisition facing shareholder resistance. Risk flags include Kohl's net loss, Lulu's Nasdaq deficiency, and Universal Corp's goodwill impairment. Key opportunities lie in IBM's quantum computing investment, Marvell's AI-driven growth, and Devon's merger synergies. Scheduled events include Two Harbors special meeting on June 11 and Yum China's share repurchase authority.

22 high priority 28 medium 50 total filings
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US SEC Filings Daily Market Digest — May 28, 2026

Today's filings reveal a market bifurcated between aggressive capital deployment and operational strain. A surge in SPAC activity, particularly in deep-tech sectors (quantum computing, nuclear energy, solid-state batteries), signals a renewed appetite for high-risk, long-duration assets, with Pasqal, NewCleo, and Factorial all progressing toward public listings. Conversely, consumer-facing companies like Burlington, Dollar Tree, and Build-A-Bear show a clear divergence: top-line growth is being maintained, but margin expansion is increasingly dependent on cost-cutting and one-time benefits (e.g., tariff refunds) rather than organic pricing power. A significant capital allocation theme has emerged, with Salesforce and Hyatt announcing massive share repurchase programs ($27.4B and $1.0B respectively), while distressed companies like Nature's Miracle and ENDRA Life Sciences resort to heavily dilutive financings to stave off collapse. The quantum computing sector received a major validation from IBM's $10B investment commitment, contrasting with the struggles of legacy tech firms like ZRCN Inc., which reported a widening net loss of $1.9B. Overall, the data suggests a 'haves and have-nots' market, where strong balance sheets are being used to aggressively reward shareholders, while weaker entities face existential liquidity challenges.

30 high priority 20 medium 50 total filings
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S&P 500 Consumer Discretionary Sector SEC Filings — May 28, 2026

The 50 filings reveal a mixed picture for the S&P 500 Consumer Discretionary sector. Revenue growth is robust at several companies (Lowe's +10.3% YoY, American Eagle +10% YoY, Yum China stable), but margin pressures are evident from tariffs, inventory writedowns, and rising costs. Notable insider selling and guidance cuts at Hormel Foods (lowered EPS guidance) contrast with strong forward-looking data at Modine (40%+ EBITDA growth expected). Capital allocation is active: Lowe's completed large acquisitions, Salesforce repurchased $27.4B in stock, and several companies issued debt or equity. Risks include delisting threats (Lulu's Fashion Lounge, ENDRA Life Sciences) and shareholder dissent at annual meetings. The sector shows bifurcation between companies benefiting from data center/AI demand (Modine, Marvell) and those facing consumer headwinds (American Eagle brand decline). Overall, the data suggests selective opportunities in companies with strong guidance and insider confidence, while caution is warranted for those with deteriorating fundamentals.

26 high priority 24 medium 50 total filings
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S&P 500 Healthcare Sector SEC Filings — May 28, 2026

The 41 filings from the S&P 500 Healthcare stream reveal a sector bifurcated between capital-intensive growth plays and mature, cash-generating incumbents. Key themes include aggressive capital raising for development-stage assets (e.g., New Horizon Aircraft, ENDRA Life Sciences), proxy fights and activist engagement (Pacira BioSciences), and mixed operational performance where revenue growth is offset by margin compression and impairment charges (RCI Hospitality). Insider activity is sparse but notable, with a director resignation at Hanmi Financial and a CFO departure at Cineverse. Forward-looking data points to several high-impact catalysts, including a SPAC merger for Newcleo and a shareholder vote on a fund reorganization. The most critical development is the potential delisting risk for ENDRA Life Sciences, which overshadows its capital raise, while the Pacira proxy fight represents a high-conviction opportunity based on Glass Lewis's recommendation. Overall, the stream suggests a cautious but opportunistic stance, favoring companies with clear catalysts and strong governance over those with deteriorating fundamentals.

18 high priority 23 medium 41 total filings
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US Executive Compensation Proxy SEC Filings — May 28, 2026

This batch of 9 DEF 14A filings reveals a mixed governance landscape dominated by a transformative energy merger at Devon Energy (with Coterra), a high-stakes SPAC survival vote at Lionheart Holdings, and numerous routine annual meetings. A key period-over-period theme emerges from Devon's disclosed operational outperformance: oil volumes exceeded top-end guidance and capital efficiency improved materially, suggesting strong execution. Insider activity is sparse across the filings, but Lionheart's insiders (25% ownership) are voting to extend the business combination deadline, signaling commitment but also highlighting liquidation risk. Forward-looking data is most potent at Devon ($2B in total synergy targets by 2027) and Lionheart (extension deadline decision). Sector themes center on SPAC extension urgency, executive pay advisory votes at several small-caps (Educational Development, ChargePoint, Willamette Valley), and a shareholder proposal at Neuberger Berman NBXG. Capital allocation insights are limited, as most filings are governance-focused without detailed balance sheet or buyback data. The most actionable intelligence revolves around Devon's post-merger synergy capture and Lionheart's make-or-break shareholder vote on June 20, 2026.

9 high priority 9 total filings
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US IPO Pipeline SEC S-1 Filings — May 28, 2026

The IPO pipeline on May 28, 2026, presents a bifurcated landscape: two legitimate growth-oriented filings (Entrata and GridAI) alongside two speculative or distressed situations (Youmi and the Peach State merger). Entrata's S-1 signals a high-profile tech IPO with complex compensation structures tied to majority owner returns, while GridAI's registration for warrant resale reflects a post-reverse-merger transformation into AI infrastructure with zero revenue from its new platform. The Peach State merger (UCB S-4) introduces a traditional banking consolidation with a fixed exchange ratio and regulatory hurdles. Period-over-period comparisons are limited as most filers lack historical financial data, but GridAI's shift from biopharma to AI-data center energy optimization represents a dramatic pivot. Insider activity is absent across filings, but the lack of proceeds to issuing companies (GridAI, Youmi) raises capital structure concerns. The overall sentiment is cautious, with materiality scores uniformly high (8/10) due to the transformative nature of these events.

4 high priority 4 total filings
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Global High-Priority Regulatory Events — May 28, 2026

The 50 filings reviewed today reveal a market dominated by regulatory enforcement actions and capital market transactions, with a notable cluster of government-owned entities facing fines for board composition non-compliance. Revenue growth trends are mixed: Salesforce posted a strong 13.3% YoY revenue increase, while Ashok Leyland’s 13.6% FY26 top-line growth was partially offset by Q4 margin compression. Capital allocation is a key theme, with HP Inc. and Salesforce engaging in aggressive share repurchases, the latter spending $27.4B in the quarter, while Zydus Lifesciences increased its buyback price by 9.6%. The SPAC and de-SPAC landscape shows increased activity, particularly in the energy and nuclear technology sectors, with NewCleo and Hadron Energy nearing public listings. Insider trading activity is sparse, but significant director resignations at Hanmi Financial and Braemar Hotels suggest potential governance shifts. The most critical development is GameStop’s $125/share bid for eBay—a high-risk, transformative M&A move that could reshape e-commerce and collectibles markets if successful.

50 high priority 50 total filings
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US Earnings Financial Results SEC Filings — May 28, 2026

The 33 filings reveal a mixed earnings season with revenue growth across most companies but notable margin compression and rising costs. Key themes include strong performance in AI-related and infrastructure services (Marvell, Dycom, EPLUS), while consumer-facing companies (BJ's, Hormel) face margin pressure. Several SPACs and micro-caps show severe cash burn (Aerkomm, IWAC). Insider activity is limited, but capital allocation trends show aggressive buybacks at Salesforce and HealthEquity. Forward-looking data is sparse, but upcoming earnings calls for Deere and Lowe's are key catalysts. Overall, growth is broad but profitability is challenged by restructuring, acquisition costs, and rising SG&A.

33 high priority 33 total filings
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US SEC Trading Suspension Halt Orders — May 28, 2026

All three filings involve Nasdaq deficiency notices received between May 21-22, 2026, highlighting a cluster of compliance failures among small-cap companies. Lulu's Fashion Lounge (LVLU) faces a fundamental equity shortfall with negative stockholders' equity of $(525)K, while CDT Equity and Richtech Robotics both failed to timely file their Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2026. No period-over-period comparisons, insider activity, or forward-looking guidance were provided in these filings, limiting quantitative trend analysis. The materiality is highest for LVLU (9/10) due to the existential threat to its listing, while the filing failures for CDT and Richtech are procedural but carry delisting risk if not resolved. The cluster suggests potential systemic issues in compliance or financial reporting among micro-cap issuers.

3 high priority 3 total filings
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US Corporate Distress Financial Stress SEC Filings — May 28, 2026

The 49 filings from May 28, 2026, reveal a market bifurcated between aggressive corporate actions (M&A, refinancing) and acute financial distress, particularly among small-cap and micro-cap companies. A dominant theme is the wave of refinancing and debt restructuring, with companies like Kinder Morgan, Hexcel, PBF Energy, and Kennametal extending maturities and managing balance sheets, while distressed entities like Nature's Miracle, Celularity, and Allbirds engage in survival-mode settlements and covenant amendments. Distress signals are concentrated in Nasdaq compliance failures, with Lulu's Fashion Lounge, CDT Equity, and Richtech Robotics receiving deficiency notices, and distressed financing (PIPEs, high-interest loans) from ENDRA Life Sciences, Vestand, and Polaryx Therapeutics. On the opportunity side, high-value M&A is a key catalyst, including the $17.6B acquisition of Caesars Entertainment, Autodesk's $3.6B acquisition of MaintainX, and Apogee Enterprises' accretive acquisition of Kalwall. Sector themes point to a capital rotation from distressed small-caps to larger, cash-rich acquirers, with energy infrastructure (Cheniere, Sabine Pass) and AI infrastructure (Boost Run) seeing significant long-term investment commitments. The overall sentiment is cautiously optimistic for large caps with strong balance sheets, but highly bearish for micro-caps facing liquidity crises and potential delisting.

49 high priority 49 total filings
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US Executive Officer Management Changes SEC — May 28, 2026

The 50 filings reveal a mixed landscape of leadership transitions and shareholder sentiment across US equities. Notable trends include several CEO departures (Schmitt Industries, Allogene Therapeutics, Tyson Foods, Clorox, Energy Recovery) and a high volume of board appointments, often bringing operational or regulatory expertise. Insider activity is sparse but includes a significant debt-to-equity conversion by Microvast's CEO. Forward-looking data shows reaffirmed guidance at Tyson Foods and Utz Brands, while Karyopharm's retention program ties equity to clinical milestones. Shareholder dissent is evident at Vir Biotechnology (44.7% withhold for Janet Napolitano), Customers Bancorp (32% against say-on-pay), and Harley-Davidson (climate proposal rejected). Capital allocation trends include dividend declarations at California BanCorp and TFS Financial, with TFSL's MHC waiving dividends. The CECO-Thermon merger received overwhelming approval (99.9%+), signaling strong deal support. Overall, the period shows active governance restructuring with mixed market signals.

50 high priority 50 total filings
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US Corporate Board Director Changes SEC Filings — May 28, 2026

The 50 filings from May 28, 2026, reveal a significant wave of board and C-suite turnover across sectors, with 30+ filings detailing director resignations, CEO successions, and executive appointments. Key themes include a notable shift towards leaner governance structures (e.g., Beeline Holdings, Schmitt Industries), strategic realignments in the C-suite (e.g., Tyson Foods, Allogene Therapeutics, Clorox), and a high volume of annual meeting outcomes showing strong shareholder support for management proposals but pockets of dissent on executive compensation (e.g., Customers Bancorp with 32% against say-on-pay). Period-over-period comparisons were largely absent from these event-driven filings, but forward-looking statements from Tyson Foods (reaffirmed FY2026 guidance) and Utz Brands (reaffirmed outlook) suggest stable near-term expectations. The most critical developments include the sudden CEO departures at Clorox (health reasons) and Energy Recovery (personal reasons), and the simultaneous resignation of three top executives at AIxCrypto Holdings, signaling potential governance instability. Insider activity was limited, but the conversion of a $25M loan by Microvast's CEO is a notable capital allocation event. Overall, the digest points to a period of transition and strategic recalibration, with opportunities in companies executing well-planned successions and risks in those facing abrupt leadership voids.

50 high priority 50 total filings