Zymeworks Moves to Acquire Theravance Biopharma in $929 Million Deal

Vancouver-based Zymeworks (Nasdaq: ZYME) announced this morning it has signed a definitive agreement to acquire Theravance Biopharma (Nasdaq: TBPH) for $17.00 per share in cash, a deal valued at roughly $929 million. The transaction adds YUPELRI® (revefenacin), the only nebulized once-daily LAMA approved for COPD maintenance therapy, to Zymeworks’ growing portfolio of partnered commercial assets.

The move is consistent with the strategy Zymeworks outlined earlier this year: pair royalty-generating assets with its internal R&D pipeline to create a more durable, self-funded business. The company has been building toward this kind of deal since pivoting away from a pure drug development model, and today’s announcement is the clearest sign yet that the strategy is gaining traction.

YUPELRI® has been on the U.S. market since 2019, co-promoted by Viatris and Theravance Biopharma. Full-year 2025 net sales came in at $266.6 million, up 12% over the prior year, with Q1 2026 sales of $62.4 million representing 7% growth year-over-year. Zymeworks will receive a 35% U.S. net profit share, which at current run-rates translates to roughly $60 million in annualized cash flow. Generic entry has been pushed to April 2039 following settlements with all filers, giving the asset a clear commercial runway.

Financing the deal involved some creativity. Zymeworks secured a $350 million non-recourse note from OMERS Life Sciences, structured so that 75% of the YUPELRI® profit-share cash flows service the debt. Critically, the note has no recourse to the rest of Zymeworks’ balance sheet. The company will contribute $219 million in existing cash, with Theravance Biopharma’s expected net cash balance of approximately $360 million at closing covering most of the remainder. A $100 million milestone payment from Royalty Pharma related to TRELEGY ELLIPTA® sales is expected in Q1 2027, which effectively cuts Zymeworks’ net cash outlay roughly in half.

Beyond YUPELRI®, the deal brings additional upside. Theravance Biopharma holds royalty interests on VIBATIV® through Cumberland, is eligible for up to $125 million in future YUPELRI® commercial milestones from Viatris, and carries approximately $2.5 billion in Irish tax attributes that Zymeworks intends to preserve for future use. A preclinical inflammation and immunology portfolio also transfers, though Zymeworks has signaled it will evaluate those assets against its broader pipeline priorities.

CEO Kenneth Galbraith framed the deal as core to the company’s longer-term vision of blending commercial cash flows with internal innovation, describing it as a way to fund next-generation therapies while supporting patients who need access today. The boards of both companies have unanimously approved the transaction.

Closing is expected in the second half of 2026, subject to Theravance Biopharma shareholder approval and regulatory clearance. Kirkland & Ellis is serving as legal counsel to Zymeworks, with TD Cowen advising on the OMERS note. Lazard and Evercore are advising Theravance Biopharma.

V2X (VVX) – A Major Recompete Win


Monday, June 29, 2026

Joe Gomes, CFA, Managing Director, Equity Research Analyst, Generalist , Noble Capital Markets, Inc.

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

Award. In its daily contract awards, on Friday, the Department of War announced it has awarded V2X subsidiary Vertex Aerospace a $500 million maximum firm-fixed-price, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract for contractor logistic support services for the Air Force C-12 aircraft fleet. This is another in a long line of significant awards won by V2X, either new or re-competes, and highlights the Company’s diverse capabilities, in our view.

Details.  This contract provides time-sensitive movement of personnel, cargo, and medical evacuation, as well as test support for Air Force Materiel Command, Defense Intelligence Agency, Defense Security Cooperation Agency, and Pacific Air Forces. The contract is expected to be completed by June 30, 2031. The contract involves Foreign Military Sales. This contract was a competitive acquisition, and three offers were received.


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T3 Defense (DFNS) – Operating at the Critical Chokepoints of the Defense Industrial Base


Monday, June 29, 2026

Joe Gomes, CFA, Managing Director, Equity Research Analyst, Generalist , Noble Capital Markets, Inc.

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

Initiation. We are initiating research coverage of T3 Defense Inc. (NASDAQ: DFNS) with an Outperform rating and a $0.80 price target. T3 Defense is a global aerospace & defense holding company focused on acquiring and operating mission-critical defense businesses embedded at critical chokepoints of long-cycle national security programs. Through disciplined M&A, centralized capital and strategy, and decentralized operating autonomy, T3 Defense seeks to build the asymmetric edge by strengthening critical defense capabilities and compound long-term value.

Focus. The strategy targets Tier 2 and Tier 3 suppliers that form the industrial backbone of national security infrastructure, with particular emphasis on companies offering dual-use technologies, advanced AI applications, and critical manufacturing capabilities. Management is targeting high-growth areas in the defense industry, which is undergoing a strategic recapitalization driven by ongoing conflicts and rapid technological change.


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*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. 

AZZ (AZZ) – AZZ to Report First Quarter FY 2027 Results on July 8; Quarterly Cash Dividend Increased 20%


Monday, June 29, 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.

Quarterly Dividend Increased. AZZ recently announced a 20.0% increase in its quarterly cash dividend to $0.24 per share, or $0.96 per share on an annualized basis, up from $0.20 per share, or $0.80 per share on an annualized basis, reflecting continued confidence in the company’s financial position and commitment to returning capital to shareholders. The dividend will be paid on July 30 to shareholders of record as of July 9.

First Quarter FY 2027 Financial Results. AZZ will report its first quarter fiscal 2027 financial results after the market closes on July 8, followed by a webcast and conference call on July 9 at 11:00 am ET. In addition to the first-quarter FY 2027 operating performance, we expect management to discuss demand trends, capital allocation priorities, and the outlook for the fiscal year, including potential acquisitions.


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DLH Holdings (DLHC) – Navy Contract


Monday, June 29, 2026

Joe Gomes, CFA, Managing Director, Equity Research Analyst, Generalist , Noble Capital Markets, Inc.

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

New Award. DLH has been awarded a multiple-award indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity (MAC ID/IQ) contract to provide a full range of logistics information technology services for U.S. Navy integrated platforms and DevSecOps pipelines. Under the contract, DLH will implement mission-driven, interoperable, and cost-effective solutions for customers as they confront critical system integration challenges. This new award should enable DLH to expand its offerings to the Navy, opening a new growth channel for the Company.

Details. DLH is one of multiple prime awardees on the contract, which includes a 5-year base period. The contract has a $250 million ceiling for all awardees. Task orders are expected to be released under the contract, for which DLH expects to compete.


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Russell Reconstitution 2026 Takes Effect: 237 New Names Join the Small Cap Index

The Russell US Indexes reconstitution that we previewed earlier this month officially took effect at the close of trading Friday, and US markets opened this morning, Monday June 29, with the newly recalibrated indexes in operation. The timing is notable. Just last week we wrote about the market rotation finally broadening beyond a handful of mega cap technology names and into small caps — and this reconstitution is the structural machinery that formalizes exactly that shift, recalibrating which companies sit in which index after a year of dramatic movement across the market cap spectrum.

After a query period, a lock-down phase, and one of the highest-volume trading sessions of the year on Friday, the 2026 reconstitution is now complete — and the changes offer a revealing snapshot of how the US equity market has evolved over the past twelve months.

A Market That Grew 29% in a Year

The headline figure is the scale of the market’s expansion. The total market capitalization of the Russell 3000 — the broad index designed to capture roughly 98% of the investable US equity market — rose 29% from $58.4 trillion at last year’s reconstitution to $75.6 trillion as of the April 30 rank day. That growth rippled through every layer of the index family. The market capitalization breakpoint separating large-cap companies in the Russell 1000 from small-cap companies in the Russell 2000 increased 24% to $5.7 billion. At the lower boundary, the smallest company in the Russell 2000 now carries a market cap of approximately $146 million, up nearly 23% from a year ago.

A Historic Shakeup at the Top

One of the most striking changes occurred among the largest companies in the index. For more than a decade, Apple and Microsoft traded places as the two largest US companies. This year broke that pattern. Driven by the artificial intelligence boom, Nvidia rose from third place in 2025 to become the largest company in both the Russell 3000 and Russell 1000, while Alphabet climbed from fifth to second. Apple and Microsoft slipped to third and fourth. It is the clearest index-level evidence yet of how completely AI has reshaped market leadership.

The Small Cap Story Beneath the Surface

For ChannelChek’s audience, the more relevant action is happening lower down the market cap spectrum. A total of 237 companies were added to the Russell 2000 this cycle, with additions concentrated most heavily in health care, followed by technology, industrials, and consumer discretionary. That cohort includes 82 companies migrating up from the Russell Microcap Index, 37 moving down from the Russell 1000, and 101 newly eligible entrants joining from outside the Russell universe. Seventeen IPOs were added directly to the small cap index, led by eight health care names.

The reconstitution also revealed the strength of the recent small cap surge through its banding mechanism. A remarkable 97 existing Russell 2000 constituents ranked above the large cap breakpoint based on market cap but remained in the small cap index because they fell within the retention band — a buffer designed to reduce unnecessary turnover. That is an unusually high number, and it reflects just how many small cap companies have appreciated toward large cap territory over the past year.

Why the Semi-Annual Shift Matters Going Forward

This reconstitution carries lasting structural significance because 2026 marks the first time since 1989 that FTSE Russell has moved to a semi-annual schedule. A second reconstitution will now occur in December, and the implications are real. With roughly $12 trillion in assets benchmarked to Russell indexes, the addition of a December rebalance means that companies growing rapidly into or shrinking out of an index will be repositioned far faster than the prior annual cadence allowed.

For active small cap managers, that change raises the stakes around benchmark awareness and risk management. Stocks that appreciate quickly can now be migrated to a new index in months rather than waiting a full year, compressing the window in which fundamental changes get reflected in index composition. For investors, the practical takeaway is that index inclusion remains a powerful driver of passive fund flows and liquidity — but inclusion is not the same as fundamental validation. A company can join an index and still carry execution, dilution, or earnings risk. The reconstitution list is best understood as a map of where benchmark-driven attention may flow, not a substitute for due diligence.

The rebalanced indexes are live. The market they represent looks materially different than it did a year ago — larger at the top, broader beneath the surface, and now recalibrated twice as often as it was for the prior 37 years.

The Rotation Investors Have Waited All Year For Is Finally Happening

For most of 2026, the case for a market broadening beyond a handful of mega cap technology names has been a thesis. As of this week, it is becoming a reality. A global technology selloff intensified Friday, dragging the Nasdaq toward its fourth consecutive session of losses, while the parts of the market that had been overlooked for months quietly moved in the opposite direction. The Dow Jones Industrial Average touched a fresh all-time intraday high this week. And the Russell 2000, the benchmark for small cap stocks, pushed toward the 3,000 level after months of underperformance.

This is the rotation. And the data underneath it suggests it may have staying power.

What’s Driving the Move

The catalyst on the surface is weakness in technology. Apple and Microsoft both fell after announcing price increases on consumer hardware tied to rising memory costs, a reported delay in OpenAI’s IPO rattled sentiment around AI valuations, and a sharp selloff in Asian tech markets — South Korea’s KOSPI triggered a circuit breaker after an 8% intraday drop — spilled into US trading. Investors are reassessing whether the largest technology companies can justify the valuations the market assigned them during the AI rally.

But the more important story is where the money is going, not just what it’s leaving. Underneath the tech weakness, market breadth is expanding meaningfully. By late Thursday, 63% of S&P 500 stocks were trading above their 50-day moving average, up from 50% at the start of June. Advancing stocks have consistently outnumbered decliners even on down days for the index. And the correlation between the cap-weighted and equal-weighted versions of the S&P 500 has fallen to its lowest level since 2003 — a technical signal that the market is no longer moving in lockstep with a few giant names.

The Tailwinds Beneath Small Caps

Several forces are converging to support the move into smaller, more domestically focused companies. The 10-year Treasury yield has dropped below 4.5% as oil prices retreat on the easing Iran conflict, lowering borrowing costs for the smaller companies that carry disproportionately more variable-rate debt. The Russell 2000 has surged roughly 21% in 2026 while the S&P 500 has added less than 10%, and the valuation gap between the two remains near its widest level in over two decades.

The breadth of the rally is visible across exactly the kinds of sectors that had been left behind. Industrials and domestic manufacturers — names ranging from blue-chip Caterpillar down to smaller players like FreightCar America and Titan International — sit directly in the path of the onshoring and infrastructure investment themes driving the broadening. Consumer-facing companies such as ONE Group Hospitality and energy producers including Alliance Resource Partners operate in corners of the market that benefit when capital rotates away from crowded technology positioning and toward businesses with tangible cash flows and reasonable multiples.

What Comes Next

The question now is durability. If Treasury yields continue declining and oil stays contained, the conditions supporting the rotation strengthen. If tech stabilizes and reclaims leadership, the broadening could stall as it did in March and April. But the structural case for small caps — historic valuation discounts, improving earnings growth, and domestic revenue exposure — has been intact all year. What changed this week is that the market finally started pricing it in. For investors who positioned early, the rotation they have been waiting for is no longer a forecast. It is happening in real time.

Newsmax (NMAX) – Recurring Revenue Mix Improves; EBITDA Outlook Strengthens


Friday, June 26, 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.

Strong operating momentum despite a challenging comparison. First-quarter revenue growth was driven by affiliate fee expansion, licensing growth, and improved distribution economics, while Newsmax maintained strong audience engagement with 30.4 million viewers and posted a 29% sequential increase in total viewership versus Q4 2025.

Meaningfully improving earnings outlook. We are raising our 2026 adjusted EBITDA estimate to a loss of $3.4 million, up from our prior estimate of $16.4 million. While our revenue outlook remains largely unchanged, the improved profitability reflects a more favorable revenue mix, lower operating expense assumptions, and increasing confidence in management’s execution.


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*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. 

Commercial Vehicle Group (CVGI) – To Join Russell 2000; $25M ATM


Friday, June 26, 2026

Joe Gomes, CFA, Managing Director, Equity Research Analyst, Generalist , Noble Capital Markets, Inc.

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

Russell 2000. Commercial Vehicle Group (CVG) is expected to join the U.S. small-cap Russell 2000 Index and the broad-market Russell 3000 Index as part of the 2026 reconstitution of the Russell U.S. Indexes. The reconstituted indexes will take effect after the U.S. equity markets close on Friday, June 26, 2026. We expect the potential for additional demand for CVGI shares as index funds recalibrate portfolios to adjust for index newcomers.

Sales Agreement. Late last week, CFG entered into a “Capital on Demand” sales agreement for the sale of up to $25 million of CVGI shares. At the then $5.29 share price at the time of the filing, the full $25 million represented approximately 4.7 million shares, which would increase shares outstanding by 11.5%.


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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. 

Aurania Resources (AUIAF) – Second and Final Tranche of C$1.26 Million Private Placement Closed


Friday, June 26, 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. Aurania Resources closed the second and final tranche of its non-brokered private placement, raising C$578,370.96 through the sale of 3,213,172 units at a price of C$0.18 per unit. Combined with the first tranche, the financing generated gross proceeds of C$1,256,634.72 through the issuance of 6,981,304 units at a price of C$0.18 per unit. Each unit is composed of one common share and one warrant exercisable at C$0.35 per share for a period of 24 months following the date of issuance.

Use of Funds. Net proceeds from the financing will be used for exploration at the Thor’s Valley epithermal gold project in Iceland, the Balangero nickel-cobalt tailings retreatment project in Italy, and for general working capital. Following the financing, we estimate the company has 139,236,609 shares outstanding.


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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. 

onsemi’s $7 Billion Synaptics Deal Is a Bet on “Physical AI” — the Next Frontier Beyond the Data Center

The artificial intelligence trade has spent two years concentrated almost entirely inside the data center. onsemi (Nasdaq: ON) just made a $7 billion wager that the next chapter takes place out in the physical world. The Scottsdale-based semiconductor company announced it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Synaptics (Nasdaq: SYNA) in an all-stock transaction valued at approximately $7 billion in enterprise value — the largest acquisition in onsemi’s history and one of the more strategically revealing deals in the chip sector this year.

Under the terms, Synaptics shareholders will receive 1.350 shares of onsemi common stock for each Synaptics share, representing roughly a 19% premium to the 10-day volume-weighted average closing prices of both companies. The transaction is expected to close in mid-2027, subject to Synaptics shareholder and regulatory approvals.

What “Physical AI” Actually Means

The strategic concept driving the deal is what onsemi calls Physical AI — artificial intelligence embedded directly into devices and machines, enabling them to sense their environment, make decisions, act, and adapt in the real world. This is distinct from the data center AI that has dominated headlines. Where data center AI trains and runs large models in centralized facilities, Physical AI lives at the edge: in automobiles, industrial robots, factory equipment, medical devices, and connected consumer products.

onsemi frames the combined company as sitting at the intersection of four pillars: Power, Sense, Connected Compute, and Control. The company has long held strength in the first two — intelligent power management and sensing technologies for automotive and industrial markets. What it lacked was the compute and connectivity layer that turns raw sensor data into intelligent action. That is precisely what Synaptics brings.

What Synaptics Adds

Synaptics contributes four decades of innovation in Edge AI compute, human-machine interface technology, and wireless connectivity solutions. Its portfolio enables the kind of on-device intelligence and interaction that Physical AI requires — touch, display, voice, and connectivity systems that allow machines to interface with both their environment and their users. Combining Synaptics’ edge compute franchise with onsemi’s power and sensing leadership creates a company able to offer integrated solutions across every layer of the Edge AI stack.

The financial logic is anchored in market expansion. onsemi expects the acquisition to increase its total addressable market by $30 billion, bringing it to $243 billion by 2030. That is the size of the opportunity onsemi believes Physical AI represents as intelligence migrates out of the data center and into the billions of devices and machines operating in the physical economy.

Why This Matters Beyond the Two Companies

For investors tracking the broader semiconductor landscape, the onsemi-Synaptics combination carries a signal that extends well past the deal itself. The AI investment narrative has been overwhelmingly concentrated in data center infrastructure — GPUs, memory, networking, and the hyperscaler buildout. This transaction is a high-conviction bet by an established player that the next phase of AI value creation happens at the edge, in the physical world, embedded in real machines.

That thesis has direct implications for smaller companies. As Physical AI demand accelerates, the suppliers of edge sensors, power management components, connectivity modules, embedded compute, and the specialized materials that go into device-level intelligence stand to benefit. Many of those companies operate well below the $2 billion market cap threshold and sit in exactly the part of the supply chain that a Physical AI buildout would pull forward.

The data center AI trade has been the story of the past two years. onsemi just put $7 billion behind the idea that the physical world is next.

The Fed’s Preferred Inflation Gauge Just Hit a 3-Year High. A Rate Hike Is Back on the Table

The inflation data the Federal Reserve cares about most just delivered an unwelcome surprise. The Personal Consumption Expenditures price index — the gauge the FOMC uses to measure progress toward its 2% target — rose to its highest level in three years in May, according to data released Thursday. The reading keeps the prospect of a 2026 interest rate hike firmly in play and complicates the path forward for a central bank already navigating one of the most difficult macro environments in years.

Headline PCE climbed to 3.5% year over year, up from the prior month and the highest since 2023. Core PCE, which strips out volatile food and energy costs and is the measure policymakers watch most closely, also accelerated. The data confirms what last month’s Consumer Price Index reading had already suggested: inflation is not cooling on the timeline markets had hoped for, and the energy-driven spike from the US-Iran conflict has bled into the broader price picture.

Why This Keeps a Hike in Play

The report lands just over a week after new Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh presided over his first FOMC meeting, where the committee held rates steady but dropped its long-standing easing bias and signaled through its updated projections that nine of 18 officials now expect at least one rate hike before year-end. Thursday’s PCE reading strengthens that hawkish case considerably. Markets are now pricing in elevated odds of a rate increase in the second half of 2026 — a dramatic reversal from the rate cuts that were consensus just a few months ago.

For the Fed, the data presents a genuine dilemma. Inflation is accelerating while consumer sentiment recently hit an all-time low and growth signals have been mixed. That combination raises the specter of stagflation — the most difficult environment for any central bank to manage, and one with outsized consequences for smaller, rate-sensitive companies.

Where the Pressure Lands

The companies most exposed to this environment are consumer-facing businesses and those carrying significant variable-rate debt. When inflation erodes real household purchasing power, discretionary spending on dining, travel, apparel, and other non-essentials is typically the first to contract — pressuring the smaller consumer-facing companies that lack the pricing power and balance sheet depth of their large cap peers.

Energy sits on the other side of the equation. As the primary driver of May’s inflation spike, elevated energy prices that squeeze consumers can simultaneously support revenues for oil, gas, and energy infrastructure producers. That divergence is part of what makes the current inflation picture so difficult for the Fed to address with a single policy lever — the same force hurting one part of the economy is helping another.

What Comes Next

The PCE reading sets up a tense second half of the year. If energy prices continue easing as the Iran ceasefire holds and oil retreats below $75, the inflation picture could improve meaningfully in the coming months, giving the Fed room to hold rather than hike. If price pressures prove stickier and spread further into core categories, the case for a hike strengthens with each data release.

For small and microcap investors, the message is to watch the inflation trajectory as closely as the Fed itself. The cost of capital for smaller companies — which carry disproportionately more floating-rate debt than large caps — hinges directly on whether this PCE reading marks a peak or the start of a more troubling trend. Thursday’s number tilted the odds toward caution. The next several data points will determine whether that caution becomes conviction.

Crypto Has Lost More Than Half Its Value in Eight Months

The crypto market is in the middle of one of the most sustained drawdowns in its history, and there is no clear sign it has found a bottom. The total market capitalization of cryptocurrency has erased more than half its value in just eight months. After peaking at a record $4.3 trillion on October 6, 2025, the total crypto market is now worth approximately $2.0 trillion — a 54% decline over 261 days. That works out to an average of roughly $8.8 billion in value erased every single day for nearly nine consecutive months.

Bitcoin, the sector’s bellwether, is trading just below $59,200, down nearly 1% on the session and well off the highs above $100,000 it commanded earlier in this cycle.

Why the Selloff Makes Sense

The pullback, while severe, is not difficult to explain. Crypto is among the highest-risk, most speculative asset classes in the market, and the macro environment of 2026 has been actively hostile to risk. Inflation running at 4.2%, a Federal Reserve under new chair Kevin Warsh that has dropped its easing bias and signaled potential rate hikes before year-end, persistent geopolitical tension from the Iran conflict, and a broad repricing of stretched valuations across speculative assets have all weighed heavily on the space. Crypto has become increasingly sensitive to interest rate expectations, and a higher-for-longer rate environment removes much of the cheap, abundant risk capital that fueled prior bull runs.

There is also a competition-for-capital dynamic worth noting. The wave of high-profile AI IPOs in 2026 — Cerebras, SpaceX, and the anticipated Anthropic and OpenAI listings — has absorbed an enormous amount of the speculative risk capital that historically flowed into crypto during bull cycles. When investors can buy generational growth stories in the public markets, the appetite for digital assets diminishes.

The Case for Patience

Not everyone views the current drawdown as a reason to abandon the space. A long-cycle perspective on crypto notes that winters have repeatedly come and gone while the underlying industry continued to grow — the prior cycle bottomed near $16,000 four years ago, which makes the current $60,000 level appear relatively elevated by historical standards. The bull case from here rests on a familiar set of catalysts: clearer regulatory market structure, favorable legislation, continued development of real-world use cases, and the eventual return of risk capital once the current wave of AI companies completes their public offerings and post-IPO share lockups expire. Whether those catalysts materialize on any near-term timeline remains the central open question.

The Equity Market Alternative

For investors, the crypto drawdown raises a practical question worth considering: why attempt to time a bottom in one of the market’s most volatile asset classes when public equities are offering clear, fundamentals-driven opportunities? The contrast is stark. While crypto sheds billions daily, companies tied to the AI infrastructure buildout — including memory and semiconductor names posting blowout earnings and raising guidance — are demonstrating measurable revenue growth and expanding margins.

This is not a dismissal of crypto’s long-term potential, which remains a genuine debate. But for investors focused on opportunities grounded in earnings, cash flow, and visible demand, the public markets — including the small and microcap names feeding the AI supply chain — currently offer compelling alternatives that do not require catching a falling knife. Sometimes the better opportunity is the one hiding in plain sight.