First Phosphate Corp. (FRSPF) – Reinforcing its Leadership Position in the Igneous Phosphate Sector


Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Mark Reichman, Managing Director, Equity Research Analyst, Natural Resources, Noble Capital Markets, Inc.

Refer to the full report for the price target, fundamental analysis, and rating.

Private Placement Financing. On June 12, First Phosphate closed its oversubscribed financing to existing and other follow-on investors and raised a total of C$15,420,640 with the issuance of 1,432,750 hard dollar units at a price of C$2.00 per unit for gross proceeds of C$2,865,500 and 6,277,570 flow-through shares at a price of C$2.00 per share for gross proceeds of C$12,555,140. Hard dollar units included one common share and one common share purchase warrant that may be exercised for one common share at a price of C$2.50 per share until December 31, 2026, subject to an accelerated expiry date.

Use of proceeds. Proceeds will be used to strengthen the balance sheet, advance metallurgical development, and fund exploration activities across the Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean region, supporting First Phosphate’s objective of becoming the leading phosphate explorer in the area. Following Agnico Eagle Limited’s (TSX: AEM, NYSE: AEM) entry into the igneous phosphate sector through its subsidiary Avenir Minerals’ acquisition of Fox River Resources and the Martison Phosphate Project, management believes it is strategically important to secure additional exploration ground throughout the region.


Get the Full Report

Equity Research is available at no cost to Registered users of Channelchek. Not a Member? Click ‘Join’ to join the Channelchek Community. There is no cost to register, and we never collect credit card information.

This Research is provided by Noble Capital Markets, Inc., a FINRA and S.E.C. registered broker-dealer (B/D).

*Analyst certification and important disclosures included in the full report. NOTE: investment decisions should not be based upon the content of this research summary. Proper due diligence is required before making any investment decision. 

Cadrenal Therapeutics (CVKD) – Phase 2a Trial For New CAD-1005 Indication Announced


Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Robert LeBoyer, Senior Vice President, Equity Research Analyst, Biotechnology, Noble Capital Markets, Inc.

Refer to the full report for the price target, fundamental analysis, and rating.

New Trial Planned In Cardiac Surgery-Associated Acute Kidney Injury. Cadrenal announced plans for a Phase 2a trial in Cardiac Surgery-Associated Acute Kidney Injury (CSA-AKD). The trial is designed to demonstrate proof of concept and generate data on safety, measures of renal injury, and biomarkers of the 12-LOX inflammatory pathway. This would provide data on CAD-1005 in CSA-AKD as well as its other indications in development.

Trial Design. The trial is expected to test CAD-1005 using its intravenous formulation in Intensive Care Unit (ICU) settings later in FY2026. This data could be used in several development indications for CAS-1005, including the HIT (heparin-induced thrombocytopenia) indication, which is planned to begin Phase 3 later in FY2026-27. At this time, Cadrenal plans to use the data to form a development partnership for the CSA-AKI indication.


Get the Full Report

Equity Research is available at no cost to Registered users of Channelchek. Not a Member? Click ‘Join’ to join the Channelchek Community. There is no cost to register, and we never collect credit card information.

This Company Sponsored Research is provided by Noble Capital Markets, Inc., a FINRA and S.E.C. registered broker-dealer (B/D).

*Analyst certification and important disclosures included in the full report. NOTE: investment decisions should not be based upon the content of this research summary. Proper due diligence is required before making any investment decision. 

The Fed Meets This Week in Kevin Warsh’s First Test. The Dot Plot Matters More Than the Decision.

The Federal Open Market Committee convenes Tuesday and Wednesday for what is shaping up to be one of the most closely watched meetings in recent memory — not because of what the Fed is expected to do, but because of what it is expected to signal. The committee will almost certainly leave the federal funds rate unchanged at its current range of 3.50% to 3.75%, with futures markets pricing in a 99.6% probability of no change. The rate decision is effectively a foregone conclusion. Everything else about this meeting is not.

This is Kevin Warsh’s first FOMC meeting as Federal Reserve Chair, following Jerome Powell’s departure in May. It arrives at a moment of genuine tension within the committee and a macroeconomic backdrop that has scrambled the Fed’s traditional playbook. For investors in the small and microcap space, where borrowing costs and rate expectations weigh more heavily than almost any other variable, the signals coming out of Wednesday’s meeting matter enormously.

The Bias Shift to Watch

The single most important element of this meeting is language, not numbers. For the past three consecutive meetings, the FOMC has included an identical sentence in its post-meeting statement reflecting an inclination toward easing rates in the months ahead. The question now is whether the committee removes or revises that language — shifting its bias from easing toward neutral, or potentially even toward tightening.

That shift would be significant. Under the Fed’s traditional framework, rate cuts are appropriate when inflation is tame and the labor market is struggling. The current environment is the inverse: inflation is running at 4.2% year over year, the highest in three years, while the May jobs report showed the economy adding 172,000 positions, nearly double expectations. Under a strict reading of the dual mandate, those conditions argue for tighter policy, not looser. The market is watching to see whether Warsh’s committee acknowledges that reality in its statement language.

A Committee Already Divided

Warsh inherits a committee that is showing unusual signs of internal disagreement. The May meeting produced four dissents — the most since late 1992. One policymaker favored cutting rates outright, while three others objected to the easing bias in the statement, signaling they believed the Fed’s tone was too dovish given the inflation backdrop. That depth of division is rare and it complicates Warsh’s task in his first meeting. Building consensus around a unified message will be one of the early tests of his chairmanship.

Why the Dot Plot Is the Real Event

Alongside the rate decision, the Fed will release its updated Summary of Economic Projections — the so-called dot plot — which maps where each committee member expects rates to head over the coming years. Heading into this meeting, traders see close to a 50% probability of at least one rate hike before year-end, a dramatic reversal from the two cuts that consensus expected as recently as March. If the dot plot reflects a committee leaning toward hikes, Treasury yields will likely move higher and the entire rate-sensitive corner of the market will reprice accordingly.

Warsh’s post-decision press conference is the other key moment. Markets are still calibrating his reputation as a policy hawk, and his tone on the path forward — whether he leaves the door open to hikes or pushes back on that speculation — will set the direction for rate expectations through the summer.

The Small Cap Stakes

For companies in the sub-$2 billion market cap range, this meeting carries direct consequences. Small and microcap companies carry disproportionately more variable-rate debt than their large cap counterparts, which means their interest expense moves in near real time with rate expectations. A committee that signals higher-for-longer, or hints at hikes, extends the timeline for the rate relief that smaller, more leveraged companies have been counting on to refinance debt and expand margins.

The Russell 2000 has spent much of 2026 caught between strong underlying fundamentals and a punishing rate environment. Wednesday afternoon will go a long way toward determining which of those forces dominates heading into the second half of the year. The Fed may not move a single basis point this week. It can still move the market.

Nuvei to Acquire Payoneer for $2.75 Billion in a Bet on the Future of Cross-Border Payments

The global payments consolidation wave just produced one of its most significant transactions of 2026. Nuvei, the Montreal-based payment technology company, announced Monday it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Payoneer Global (Nasdaq: PAYO) for $2.75 billion in an all-cash deal. Under the terms of the agreement, Nuvei will acquire all outstanding Payoneer shares for $7.40 per share in cash, with the boards of directors of both companies having unanimously approved the transaction. The deal is expected to close in mid-2027, subject to shareholder approval, regulatory clearances, and customary closing conditions.

The acquisition combines two complementary players in digital payments to create a single platform capable of supporting the full transaction lifecycle for businesses operating across local and international markets.

The Scale of the Combined Company

The numbers behind the merger illustrate why the deal matters. At close, the combined company is expected to generate approximately $3 billion in annual revenue and process more than $500 billion in annual payment volume for over 2.4 million customers. The merged entity will give businesses a single partner to accept, hold, and move money — including stablecoin transactions — across more than 190 countries and territories.

That last detail is worth pausing on. The explicit inclusion of stablecoin transaction capabilities signals that Nuvei views digital asset rails as a core component of the future cross-border payments infrastructure rather than a peripheral feature. As businesses increasingly seek faster and lower-cost mechanisms for moving money internationally, stablecoin settlement has emerged as a genuine alternative to traditional correspondent banking networks, and the combined company is positioning to serve that demand directly.

What Each Company Brings

Nuvei contributes its payment processing and merchant acquiring capabilities — the infrastructure that allows businesses to accept payments from customers across channels and geographies. Payoneer brings its extensive cross-border payments network, which serves businesses in 190 countries and territories and specializes in international payouts, treasury services, and embedded financial products. Payoneer reported strong first quarter 2026 results ahead of the announcement, posting earnings per share of $0.06 against a forecast of $0.04 and revenue of $261.6 million, above the anticipated $255.08 million, driven by strength in its business-to-business segment.

The strategic logic is the creation of a unified platform. Rather than businesses stitching together separate providers for payment acceptance, international payouts, card issuance, treasury management, and foreign exchange, the combined Nuvei-Payoneer entity aims to offer all of those capabilities through a single integrated relationship.

Goldman Sachs is serving as lead financial advisor to Nuvei, with Barclays also advising. Qatalyst Partners is acting as exclusive financial advisor to Payoneer. Committed financing is being provided by BMO Capital Markets, RBC Capital Markets, Barclays, UBS, and Wells Fargo.

The Fintech Consolidation Signal

For investors tracking financial technology companies in the small and microcap space, the Nuvei-Payoneer deal reinforces a clear theme. Payments and fintech infrastructure companies with established cross-border networks, recurring revenue, and clean regulatory positioning across multiple jurisdictions are commanding strategic premiums as the industry consolidates around scale.

The $7.40 per share price represents a premium to Payoneer’s market capitalization prior to the announcement, and the deal continues a pattern of larger payment platforms acquiring specialized capabilities rather than building them organically. As global commerce shifts further toward digital and cross-border channels, the companies that own the infrastructure connecting those flows — particularly those incorporating next-generation rails like stablecoin settlement — remain among the most actively pursued acquisition targets in fintech.

Aurania Resources (AUIAF) – Takeaways from the Annual General Meeting


Monday, June 15, 2026

Mark Reichman, Managing Director, Equity Research Analyst, Natural Resources, Noble Capital Markets, Inc.

Refer to the full report for the price target, fundamental analysis, and rating.

Annual General Meeting. On June 11, Aurania shareholders approved all resolutions at the company’s Annual General Meeting of Shareholders. Dr. Keith Barron, Chairman, President, and CEO, provided an update, which can be viewed here.

Immediate Plans. In August, Aurania expects to commence a drill program at the Thor’s Valley Gold Project in Iceland. The program will entail twinning seven drill holes and one step-out hole. At the Balangero Nickel-Cobalt Project in Italy, Aurania expects to obtain permits to conduct 15 sonic drill holes and a 20 to 30-tonne bulk sample prior to the release of a Preliminary Economic Assessment. In Brittany, management is taking a second look at LiDAR data to confirm historic mine workings and continues its community engagement efforts.


Get the Full Report

Equity Research is available at no cost to Registered users of Channelchek. Not a Member? Click ‘Join’ to join the Channelchek Community. There is no cost to register, and we never collect credit card information.

This Company Sponsored Research is provided by Noble Capital Markets, Inc., a FINRA and S.E.C. registered broker-dealer (B/D).

*Analyst certification and important disclosures included in the full report. NOTE: investment decisions should not be based upon the content of this research summary. Proper due diligence is required before making any investment decision. 

Mortgage Rates Climb to 6.52% as Hot Inflation and a Blowout Jobs Report Bury Rate Cut Hopes

The brief window of mortgage rate optimism that opened earlier this spring is closing quickly. The average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage climbed to 6.52% in the week ending Wednesday, according to Freddie Mac, up from 6.48% the prior week and continuing a drift higher that has now persisted for four consecutive weeks. Rates have been anchored around 6.5% since mid-May — high enough to meaningfully suppress affordability for buyers and far enough above the lows of late 2024 to keep the refinance market largely frozen for the millions of homeowners who locked in rates between 6% and 7% over the past two years.

The catalyst for this week’s move is not one data point but two arriving in rapid succession. Last Friday’s May jobs report showed the economy added 172,000 positions — nearly double the 88,000 economists had expected. Three days earlier, the May Consumer Price Index showed inflation running at 4.2% year over year, the highest reading since 2023, driven primarily by energy costs directly tied to the ongoing US-Iran conflict. Together the two reports delivered a blunt macro message: the US economy is not slowing down, inflation is not cooling, and the Federal Reserve has neither the room nor the justification to cut interest rates anytime soon.

The Fed Picture Has Shifted Materially

Markets have responded accordingly. According to CME FedWatch data, approximately two-thirds of traders now expect the Federal Reserve to raise benchmark interest rates at least once before the end of 2026. As recently as March, the consensus expectation was for two rate cuts by year-end. That expectation has been fully reversed by the combination of persistent energy-driven inflation, a resilient labor market, and a new Federal Reserve chair in Kevin Warsh whose hawkish reputation the market is still calibrating.

Warsh chairs his first FOMC meeting June 16-17 — five days from today. A rate hike is not expected at this meeting, but his post-decision press conference and the committee’s updated dot plot will be the most consequential signal for mortgage rates in the second half of 2026. If the dot plot reflects a committee leaning toward one or more hikes before year-end, Treasury yields will move higher and mortgage rates will follow.

The Housing Market Is Adapting — Imperfectly

Despite rates holding near 6.5% for the past month, buying and selling activity actually picked up in May — a signal that buyers are gradually recalibrating expectations around a higher-rate environment rather than waiting indefinitely for relief. The traditional spring selling season has not collapsed. It has simply compressed into a narrower band of motivated buyers and sellers willing to transact at current levels.

The challenge for smaller companies in the real estate ecosystem is that this adaptation is uneven. Regional homebuilders, independent mortgage originators, title insurance companies, and real estate technology platforms in the sub-$2 billion market cap range are all operating in a market where transaction volume remains structurally suppressed relative to the 2020-2022 cycle. Community banks and smaller mortgage lenders face an additional layer of complexity: the spread between their cost of funds and their lending rates determines profitability, and in a higher-for-longer environment, that spread is being compressed by competition for deposits.

For mortgage REITs — many of which trade in the small and microcap range — the combination of elevated short-term rates, a flat yield curve, and refinance activity near multi-decade lows represents a direct earnings headwind that is not resolving on any near-term timeline.

The 30-year fixed rate at 6.52% is not the ceiling. The FOMC meeting next week will determine whether it becomes the floor.

SpaceX Opens at $150, Makes Elon Musk the World’s First Trillionaire, and Sends Smaller Space Stocks Reeling

History was made on Wall Street Friday morning. SpaceX (Nasdaq: SPCX) began trading on the Nasdaq at $150 per share — 11% above its $135 IPO price — in the largest public market debut in history. Shares immediately surged to an intraday high of $168.40, pushing the company’s market capitalization above $2 trillion and lifting Elon Musk’s net worth to an estimated $1.3 trillion or more, making him the first person in human history to achieve trillionaire status on paper.

The milestone is as much a reflection of what SpaceX has built over 24 years as it is of the scale of investor demand that greeted the stock on its first day of public trading.

The Numbers Behind the Debut

The SpaceX IPO officially priced at $135 per share Thursday evening, raising approximately $75 billion — the largest capital raise in IPO history — and assigning the company a market capitalization of $1.77 trillion from day one. The offering was oversubscribed four times, meaning institutional investors who wanted allocations did not receive them and are now buying shares in the open market, providing additional upward price support on the first trading day.

The demand dynamic is amplified by an unusually small public float. Only approximately 4% of SpaceX shares are available for public trading, with early investors, employees, and insiders holding the remaining 96% subject to lock-up restrictions. That combination of overwhelming institutional demand against a tiny available float is the primary mechanical driver of today’s opening price action.

The IPO is also one of the largest single wealth creation events in venture capital history. Founders Fund, which invested $600 million in SpaceX and holds approximately a 3% stake, is sitting on estimated returns of more than $50 billion at the $135 IPO price. Andreessen Horowitz’s stake is valued at more than $10 billion. Sequoia’s position is worth over $20 billion. Approximately 4,400 current and former SpaceX employees are expected to become millionaires as a result of the listing, with roughly 400 reaching centimillionaire status.

The Index Inclusion Catalyst Is Days Away

One of the most consequential structural factors supporting SPCX in the near term is not investor enthusiasm — it is mandatory index buying. SpaceX successfully lobbied multiple major indexes, including the Nasdaq-100, to change their inclusion eligibility rules ahead of the IPO. Under the revised Fast Entry rule that took effect May 1, SpaceX will join those indexes in a matter of days rather than the months the prior process would have required. Once included, every ETF and passive fund benchmarked to those indexes will be required to purchase SPCX at whatever price the market sets — creating a structural buyer with no price sensitivity arriving imminently.

What Is Happening to Smaller Space Stocks Today

While SPCX trades sharply higher, virtually every small and microcap space company that had been rallying in anticipation of today’s debut is selling off hard in the same session. York Space Systems is down more than 16%. Firefly Aerospace has fallen over 16%. EchoStar is off nearly 15%. Voyager Technologies is down more than 13%. AST SpaceMobile has declined more than 12%.

The pattern is a textbook “sell the news” rotation. Investors who accumulated positions in smaller space names as proxies for SpaceX IPO excitement are now rotating directly into SPCX. Capital that had been parked in accessible small cap space vehicles while SpaceX remained private is moving into the real thing now that it is publicly available.

The Question That Matters Going Forward

The more important question for investors in smaller space companies is not what happens today. It is what happens over the next six to eighteen months as SpaceX operates as a public company with $75 billion in fresh capital and a publicly traded stock as acquisition currency. The company’s vertical integration across launch, satellite connectivity, AI, and lunar operations means it competes with or could potentially acquire virtually every other company in the space technology sector.

For some smaller names, a well-capitalized public SpaceX validates and accelerates the sector’s commercial development. For others, it is a better-funded competitor now operating with full public transparency. The index buying wave arriving in the coming days will be the next major price catalyst to watch — both for SPCX and for the smaller companies trading in its orbit.

Elon Musk gave SpaceX less than a 10% chance of success when he founded it in 2002. On Friday June 12, 2026, the market assigned it a $2 trillion valuation. The 24-year wait is over.

Power Metallic Mines Inc. (PNPNF) – LIFE Offering Closed; Mr. Eric Sprott Joins Shareholder Roster


Friday, June 12, 2026

Mark Reichman, Managing Director, Equity Research Analyst, Natural Resources, Noble Capital Markets, Inc.

Refer to the full report for the price target, fundamental analysis, and rating.

LIFE Offering. Power Metallic Mines closed its previously announced brokered Listed Issuer Financing Exemption (LIFE) offering that raised C$28.2 million in gross proceeds. The company issued 22.583 million common shares of the company at a price of C$1.25 per share. The agents received an aggregate cash fee of C$1.4 million. We had already assumed the issuance of equity in our financial model. Prominent mining investor Mr. Eric Sprott invested C$2.0 million through his company, 2176423 Ontario Ltd., with the acquisition of 1.6 million shares. 

Use of Proceeds. The proceeds will be used to advance the company’s flagship Nisk Project in Quebec and its Jabul Baudan exploration license in Saudi Arabia, and to fund general working capital and corporate needs.


Get the Full Report

Equity Research is available at no cost to Registered users of Channelchek. Not a Member? Click ‘Join’ to join the Channelchek Community. There is no cost to register, and we never collect credit card information.

This Research is provided by Noble Capital Markets, Inc., a FINRA and S.E.C. registered broker-dealer (B/D).

*Analyst certification and important disclosures included in the full report. NOTE: investment decisions should not be based upon the content of this research summary. Proper due diligence is required before making any investment decision. 

Consumer Confidence Rose in June for the First Time in Three Months

The American consumer is feeling marginally better in June — but marginally is doing a lot of work in that sentence. The University of Michigan’s preliminary Index of Consumer Sentiment came in at 48.9 for June, up from 44.8 in May, which had been the lowest reading in the survey’s 74-year history. The improvement represents a 9% month-over-month gain and breaks a three-consecutive-month decline that had been weighing on every consumer-facing sector of the market.

The bounce, however, leaves sentiment still 19.4% below where it stood a year ago and below April’s final reading of 49.8. Survey director Joanne Hsu described views of the economy as “still relatively dour,” and noted that Americans continue to feel burdened by recent price increases and worry that elevated inflation will remain stubborn going forward. The improvement is real. It is not a turning point.

What Drove the June Bounce

The primary catalyst is straightforward: gas prices have pulled back from their recent highs. After surpassing $4.50 per gallon nationally and breaching $4 in every US state simultaneously in May — a historic first driven entirely by the US-Iran conflict and the disruption to Strait of Hormuz oil flows — pump prices have eased modestly. The national average is now below $4.50, though still approximately $1 above pre-war levels. California continues to post averages above $6 per gallon.

Lower-income consumers drove the largest share of the sentiment improvement in June, which is consistent with the fact that gasoline represents a proportionally larger share of spending for households at the lower end of the income spectrum. When gas prices fall even modestly, it has an outsized effect on the confidence of the consumers who feel energy costs most acutely.

Inflation expectations also showed tentative improvement. Year-ahead inflation forecasts fell to 4.6% from 4.8% in May, and long-run expectations declined to 3.4% from 3.9% — which had been the highest reading since October 2025. Both moves are directionally encouraging but remain well above the 2.8% to 3.2% range that prevailed throughout 2024. GasBuddy cautioned that the coast is “anything but clear” given continued uncertainty over a permanent Iran peace agreement and its implications for oil supply.

The Mortgage Rate Counterweight

The June sentiment improvement needs to be read alongside a data point moving in the opposite direction. As we covered earlier, the 30-year fixed mortgage rate climbed to 6.52% this week, driven by the same hot inflation data and blowout jobs report that are now showing early signs of easing in consumer sentiment. Mortgage rates have now hovered near 6.5% for four consecutive weeks, suppressing housing affordability and keeping the refinance market effectively frozen for millions of homeowners.

The consumer is getting a mixed signal: modest relief at the pump on one hand, and a housing market that remains structurally inaccessible for many buyers on the other. Gas prices and mortgage rates are pulling in opposite directions, and the net effect is a consumer who is slightly less pessimistic than last month but far from confident.

The Small Cap Implications

For consumer-facing companies in the sub-$2 billion market cap space, June’s sentiment bounce is welcome but insufficient to change the operating environment materially. Regional restaurant operators, specialty retailers, leisure travel companies, and consumer discretionary brands have been navigating compressed discretionary spending for months. A move from 44.8 to 48.9 in the sentiment index does not meaningfully alter that dynamic.

What would change it is a sustained decline in energy costs tied to a durable Iran peace agreement, which remains unresolved, combined with a Federal Reserve that begins signaling rate relief. Neither of those conditions is in place heading into next week’s FOMC meeting. The consumer is breathing slightly easier in June. The pressure has not lifted.

Superior Group of Companies (SGC) – Noble Virtual Conference Highlights


Thursday, June 11, 2026

Michael Kupinski, Director of Research, Equity Research Analyst, Digital, Media & Technology , Noble Capital Markets, Inc.

Jacob Mutchler, Research Associate, Noble Capital Markets, Inc.

Refer to the full report for the price target, fundamental analysis, and rating.

Noble Virtual Conference. On June 3rd, the company presented at the Noble Virtual Conference to the investment community. The presentation conducted by Michael Benstock, Chairman and CEO, and Michael Koempel, President and CFO, highlighted the company’s three diversified and profitable segments, accelerating momentum in its Branded Products business, and a capital allocation strategy centered on dividends, buybacks, and acquisitions. A replay of the presentation can be viewed here.

Diversified operations. The company operates three segments: Healthcare Apparel, Branded Products, and Contact Centers, each holding a modest share of a large, fragmented market with ample room to grow. 


Get the Full Report

Equity Research is available at no cost to Registered users of Channelchek. Not a Member? Click ‘Join’ to join the Channelchek Community. There is no cost to register, and we never collect credit card information.

This Company Sponsored Research is provided by Noble Capital Markets, Inc., a FINRA and S.E.C. registered broker-dealer (B/D).

*Analyst certification and important disclosures included in the full report. NOTE: investment decisions should not be based upon the content of this research summary. Proper due diligence is required before making any investment decision. 

Townsquare Media (TSQ) – Noble Virtual Conference Highlights


Thursday, June 11, 2026

Michael Kupinski, Director of Research, Equity Research Analyst, Digital, Media & Technology , Noble Capital Markets, Inc.

George Proost, Research Intern, Noble Capital Markets, Inc.

Refer to the full report for the price target, fundamental analysis, and rating.

Conference highlights. On June 3rd, Bill Wilson, CEO, and Stuart Rosenstein, Executive Vice President and CFO, participated in a fireside chat at Noble’s virtual equity conference. The discussion focused on the company’s successful evolution into a digital-first local media powerhouse, highlighting strong performance in its digital segments, the strategic use of AI, and its commitment to shareholder returns through a significant dividend and debt reduction. A replay of the presentation is available here.

Favorable digital advertising outlook. Total digital advertising grew about 7% in Q1, and management stated that Q2 is pacing stronger, led by a programmatic platform that grew over 20% year over year and now represents roughly 65% of the segment. Connected and streaming TV is the fastest-growing channel, followed by social. Management expects the acceleration to continue through the back half of the year.


Get the Full Report

Equity Research is available at no cost to Registered users of Channelchek. Not a Member? Click ‘Join’ to join the Channelchek Community. There is no cost to register, and we never collect credit card information.

This Company Sponsored Research is provided by Noble Capital Markets, Inc., a FINRA and S.E.C. registered broker-dealer (B/D).

*Analyst certification and important disclosures included in the full report. NOTE: investment decisions should not be based upon the content of this research summary. Proper due diligence is required before making any investment decision. 

FreightCar America (RAIL) – Adjusting Near-Term Estimates; Outlook Remains Favorable


Thursday, June 11, 2026

Mark Reichman, Managing Director, Equity Research Analyst, Natural Resources, Noble Capital Markets, Inc.

George Proost, Research Intern, Noble Capital Markets, Inc.

Refer to the full report for the price target, fundamental analysis, and rating.

Updating Estimates. We made modest adjustments to our Q2 and full-year 2026 estimates. We now project Q2 revenue of $111.9 million, adjusted EBITDA of $5.9 million, and EPS of $0.01, respectively, compared to our prior estimates of $100.9 million, $7.2 million, and $0.04. While our 2026 delivery estimate remains unchanged at 4,100 units, we pulled forward 100 units from the third quarter into the second quarter. We lowered our margin expectations in the second quarter due to product mix. Our full-year revenue, EBITDA, and EPS estimates are $509.0 million, $46.5 million, and $0.46, respectively, compared to previous estimates of $510.0 million, $41.8 million, and $0.48. We expect a strong second half.

Near-Term Outlook. The value of RAIL’s Q1 2026 backlog increased 13.5% sequentially to approximately $156 million based on 2,058 railcars. We think the company’s order activity has accelerated as customers have started to place orders following a period of deferment. A growing backlog provides revenue visibility for the next several quarters. Corporate 2026 guidance suggests railcar deliveries in the range of 4,000 to 4,500, revenue in the range of $500 to $550 million, and adjusted EBITDA of $41 to $50 million.


Get the Full Report

Equity Research is available at no cost to Registered users of Channelchek. Not a Member? Click ‘Join’ to join the Channelchek Community. There is no cost to register, and we never collect credit card information.

This Company Sponsored Research is provided by Noble Capital Markets, Inc., a FINRA and S.E.C. registered broker-dealer (B/D).

*Analyst certification and important disclosures included in the full report. NOTE: investment decisions should not be based upon the content of this research summary. Proper due diligence is required before making any investment decision. 

SpaceX Prices Tomorrow and Lists Thursday. For Smaller Space Tech Companies, the Ripple Effects Are Just Beginning

Twenty-four years after Elon Musk founded SpaceX with $100 million of his own capital and a stated goal of making humanity multiplanetary, the company is hours away from becoming a publicly traded stock. SpaceX prices its shares tomorrow evening June 11 at a fixed $135 per share, targeting a $1.75 trillion valuation and a $75 billion raise — the largest initial public offering in the history of global capital markets. Trading begins Thursday June 12 on the Nasdaq under the ticker SPCX.

The headline numbers are almost impossible to contextualize. The $75 billion raise is more than double Saudi Aramco’s 2019 record of $29 billion, itself the prior all-time high. At $1.75 trillion, SpaceX would debut as roughly the seventh largest US company by market capitalization, above Tesla’s current valuation. The offering is backed by 21 underwriting banks in a syndicate internally codenamed Project Apex and carries one of the largest retail allocations in IPO history — with up to 30% of shares reserved for individual investors, compared to the 5% to 10% typical of standard large deals. A dedicated retail investor event takes place tomorrow for approximately 1,500 participants before pricing locks in.

What the S-1 Actually Shows

Beyond the valuation, the S-1 prospectus filed last month confirmed the financial reality behind the ambition. SpaceX generated $18.67 billion in total revenue in 2025. Starlink, its satellite internet business, posted $1.19 billion in operating profit in Q1 2026 alone and now serves 10.3 million subscribers globally, making it the primary earnings engine of the combined company. The balance sheet carries $25.45 billion in contractual commitments, with 95% of that volume scheduled for delivery in 2026 and 2027 — a forward revenue visibility profile that most public companies would envy. The company also holds 18,712 Bitcoin valued at approximately $1.45 billion.

SpaceX is not yet consistently GAAP profitable, reflecting the capital intensity of the launch and satellite infrastructure businesses. The $1.75 trillion valuation implies roughly 93 to 116 times trailing revenue — a multiple that prices in Starlink’s long-term subscriber growth trajectory rather than current earnings.

What Thursday’s Listing Means for Smaller Space Companies

For investors tracking the small and microcap companies operating in SpaceX’s orbit, Thursday is not just a spectacle. It is a structural event with direct implications for how the space technology sector gets valued, funded, and acquired going forward.

When the anchor company in any sector goes public at a generational valuation, the effects flow downstream through the entire ecosystem. Institutional capital that had limited mechanisms to access the space sector will now have a liquid, large-cap benchmark around which to build broader space technology allocations. That reallocation historically draws attention and investment dollars toward smaller companies operating in adjacent parts of the same value chain.

The names most directly positioned to benefit include smaller launch vehicle companies, satellite infrastructure providers, space data and analytics platforms, and defense-adjacent space technology operators — many of which trade well below $2 billion in market cap and have been rallying in anticipation of exactly this moment. Rocket Lab, Momentus, Redwire, AST SpaceMobile, Planet Labs, and Voyager Technologies have all moved meaningfully higher in the weeks leading into the SpaceX debut as the sector’s profile has risen with the roadshow.

There is also an acquisition dimension worth monitoring. SpaceX entering the public markets with $75 billion in fresh capital and a publicly traded stock as acquisition currency creates conditions under which smaller space technology companies with complementary capabilities become strategically attractive targets. The company has already demonstrated an appetite for vertical integration across launch, connectivity, and AI through the xAI merger earlier this year.

The Nasdaq-100 Fast Entry rule change that took effect May 1 adds another mechanical layer. If SpaceX qualifies for the Nasdaq-100 after just 15 trading days of trading — which its market cap almost certainly ensures — index funds tracking that benchmark will be required to purchase shares at whatever price the market sets in late June. That creates a structural buyer with no price sensitivity, a dynamic that has historically supported the broader sector in the weeks following a major index inclusion event.

Thursday marks the end of SpaceX’s life as a private company. For the smaller companies that have been building in its shadow for years, it may mark the beginning of their most visible chapter yet.