Three Percent and Stuck: What February’s PCE Report Means for Small Cap Investors

February’s Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) report, released Thursday, confirmed what many on Wall Street suspected but hoped wasn’t true: inflation remains stubbornly entrenched, and the Federal Reserve has no clear path to cutting interest rates anytime soon. For small and microcap investors, this isn’t just a macro headline — it’s a direct input into valuations, borrowing costs, and growth timelines.

The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge rose 2.8% in February on a headline basis. Core PCE, which strips out food and energy and is the number the Fed actually weighs policy decisions against, came in at 3.0% — exactly where it has been parked for three consecutive months. On a 3-month annualized basis, core inflation is running at 3.7%, nearly double the Fed’s 2% target. The report was delayed from its original March 27 release date due to the government shutdown last fall, making today’s release the first clean read the market has had in months.

The timing is particularly complicated. This data reflects economic conditions that existed before the Iran conflict escalated, before oil prices surged, and before the Strait of Hormuz disruptions began compressing global supply chains. In other words, the inflation picture captured in February’s numbers is arguably the best it’s going to look for a while — and it still isn’t good enough for the Fed to act.

Goods inflation clocked in at 0.84% for the month, a figure economists point to as evidence that tariff pass-throughs are still working their way into consumer prices. That’s the sticky problem: even if geopolitical tensions ease, tariff-driven inflation has its own timeline, and the Fed can’t cut its way around it.

The one silver lining in the report was services inflation, which showed meaningful improvement in February. Services prices have been a persistent headache for central bankers because they typically reflect wage pressures and domestic demand — both harder to control than goods prices. The improvement suggests that underlying inflation may not be structurally broken, even as energy shocks pile on.

The practical read for small and microcap companies is this: the higher-for-longer rate environment is not lifting anytime soon. Small companies carry a disproportionate share of variable-rate debt and are more sensitive to the cost of capital than their large-cap counterparts. When borrowing costs stay elevated, growth initiatives slow, refinancing gets expensive, and M&A activity tightens — all headwinds for the small and microcap universe.

That said, today’s Iran ceasefire news introduces a meaningful counterweight. Oil prices have already begun pulling back, which relieves some of the near-term inflationary pressure the Fed has been bracing for. If the ceasefire holds and energy prices stabilize, the Fed may not need to hike — it just may not be in position to cut either.

Futures market participants have already absorbed this reality, with nearly 90% now expecting the Fed’s target rate to hold at 3.50%–3.75% through September 2026.

For investors focused on smaller companies, the message is clear: fundamentals matter more than ever in this environment. Companies with strong cash flows, manageable debt loads, and pricing power are best positioned to navigate a world where rate relief isn’t coming on anyone’s preferred schedule.

Xcel Brands (XELB) – A Solid Foundation For Growth


Thursday, April 09, 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.

Q4 Results. The company reported Q4 revenue of $1.2 million and an adj. EBITDA loss of $0.6 million, both of which were modestly lower than our estimates of $1.7 million and a loss of $0.5 million, respectively, as illustrated in Figure #1 Q4 Results. Notably, we view 2025 as a transformational year for the company, given several key partnerships and a more efficient operating structure that positions the company for growth.

Favorable Release Pipeline. In 2026, the company is expected to enter a more significant phase of its growth strategy, centered on brand launches and portfolio expansion. Cesar Millan, Gemma Stafford, and Jenny Martinez are expected to debut on QVC and HSN in Q2, with distribution expanding to brick-and-mortar retail and Amazon in the back half of the year. Additionally, Coco Rocha is expected to launch later in 2026.


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QuoteMedia Inc. (QMCI) – Entering a Multi-Year Growth Phase


Thursday, April 09, 2026

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

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

Q4 exceeds revenue expectations. QuoteMedia reported Q4 revenue of $5.35M (+14% y/y) and FY2025 revenue of $20.3M (+8% y/y), reflecting solid top-line momentum, while profitability declined with Adjusted EBITDA of $1.0M (vs. $1.8M prior year) and a net loss of $2.3M, driven by investment and accounting treatment of development costs.

Revenue Drivers & Earnings Dynamics. Growth was led by Corporate Quotestream (enterprise), benefiting from larger contracts, higher ARPC, and cross-selling of data and SaaS solutions, while earnings were pressured by higher expensing of development costs (vs. capitalization), which impacted reported profitability but not cash flow.


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AZZ (AZZ) – AZZ To Report FY 2026 Financial Results on April 22


Thursday, April 09, 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.

FY 2026 financial results. AZZ will release fourth quarter and FY 2026 financial results after the market close on Wednesday, April 22. Management will host an investor conference call and webcast on Thursday, April 23, at 11:00 am ET. We anticipate the company will elaborate on its FY 2027 corporate guidance and capital allocation priorities, along with discussing the market outlook and strategic drivers for each of its business segments.

Corporate guidance. FY 2026 sales, EBITDA, and EPS are expected to be in the range of $1.625 to $1.725 billion, $360 to $380 million, and $5.90 to $6.20, respectively. FY 2027 sales are expected to be in the range of $1.725 to $1.775 billion, adjusted EBITDA is expected to be in the range of $360.0 to $400.0 million, and adjusted diluted EPS is expected to be in the range of $6.50 to $7.00.


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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. 

Burry vs. Palantir: Is the AI Era Exposing a Crack in the Foundation?

Michael Burry has built a career on being early — and loudly wrong before being right. The founder of Scion Asset Management, immortalized for his prescient bet against the U.S. housing market ahead of the 2008 financial crisis, turned his sights on Palantir Technologies (PLTR) this week with a pointed post on X that sent the stock tumbling roughly 7% before he quietly deleted it.

The claim was simple and blunt, as Burry tends to be: Anthropic, the AI startup behind the Claude platform, is “eating Palantir’s lunch.”

Whether he’s right is a separate question. What’s not debatable is that the market paid attention.

What Burry Actually Said

Burry’s thesis centered on Anthropic’s explosive revenue growth — from $9 billion to $30 billion in annual recurring revenue (ARR) in a matter of months — as evidence that enterprise customers are gravitating toward AI solutions that are “easier, cheaper, and more intuitive.” His argument frames Palantir less as a high-growth technology company and more as a labor-intensive consulting business, pointing to the company’s reliance on Forward Deployed Engineers (FDEs) — Palantir staff embedded inside client organizations for months at a time to implement and maintain its platforms.

That model, Burry argued, is structurally vulnerable as direct AI integrations become more accessible. “It took $PLTR 20 years to get to $5 billion,” he noted, while Anthropic is scaling at a pace that suggests the market may be ready to reward the brains of the AI revolution over the operating systems built around it.

This isn’t a new position for Burry. He disclosed a significant short position in Palantir via long-dated put options as far back as September 2025.

The Bull Case: Palantir’s Moat is Real

Not everyone on Wall Street is ready to write Palantir’s eulogy. Wedbush analyst Dan Ives maintains an Outperform rating with a $230 price target, arguing that Palantir occupies a uniquely defensible position at the intersection of AI and federal government infrastructure. The argument: you cannot run sophisticated AI on sensitive government data without the kind of secure, structured, and compliant data architecture that Palantir provides.

That argument gained added texture this year when the Trump administration banned Anthropic from Pentagon systems following a dispute over AI safety guardrails. Palantir was reportedly ordered to remove Claude from its Maven Smart System and rebuild parts of the platform. That incident, while disruptive in the short-term, arguably underscores the stickiness of Palantir’s enterprise relationships — and the risk that pure AI model providers face in regulated environments where trust, compliance, and security clearances matter as much as raw capability.

Palantir has also posted ten consecutive quarters of accelerating revenue growth, a track record that speaks for itself regardless of how the competitive landscape evolves.

The Bear Case: Valuation Leaves Little Room for Error

Where the bull case gets complicated is on valuation. Morgan Stanley analyst Sanjit Singh, while acknowledging Palantir’s standing as a “clear winner through the first stage of the AI cycle,” has flagged that the stock currently trades at roughly 38 times 2027 sales. At that multiple, even strong execution may not be enough to drive meaningful upside. The bar is simply very high.

Burry’s consulting-business critique also has some factual grounding. Palantir’s 10-K does categorize its FDE deployments under professional services — a labor-driven revenue model that is inherently harder to scale than a software subscription or API-based product. As Anthropic and similar companies lower the barrier to deploying enterprise AI, the question of whether Palantir’s hands-on model remains a differentiator or becomes a liability is a fair one to ask.

The Bigger Picture

What this week’s episode illustrates isn’t necessarily that Burry is right or wrong about Palantir specifically. It’s that the AI investment landscape is entering a more complex phase — one where the market is beginning to draw distinctions between infrastructure plays, model providers, and application layers, and debating which of those tiers captures the most durable value.

Anthropic’s valuation recently reached $380 billion, a figure that reflects investor conviction that the model layer is where the leverage lives. Palantir’s case rests on the idea that data infrastructure and operational trust — particularly in government — represent a moat that model providers cannot easily replicate.

Both arguments have merit. The risk for investors is that at current valuations, both stocks demand a level of confidence in the future that leaves little margin for disappointment.

As always, one social media post — even a deleted one — is not a thesis. But when Michael Burry posts, it’s worth understanding exactly what he’s saying and why the market reacted the way it did.

The Mineral Powering America’s Military That Almost Nobody Is Talking About

While Wall Street fixates on gold, lithium, and rare earth elements, a lesser-known critical mineral is quietly becoming one of the most strategically important materials in the world — and a growing opportunity in the small and microcap space. The mineral is antimony, and the race to secure domestic supply is accelerating fast.

Antimony sits at the intersection of defense, energy, and advanced technology. It hardens ammunition and military alloys, serves as a key component in flame-retardant materials protecting electronics and aircraft wiring, and plays a critical role in semiconductors, infrared sensors, and night-vision systems. The U.S. Department of Defense has identified it as one of the most critical minerals in its supply chain — and for good reason. Without antimony, a significant portion of America’s weapons systems simply don’t function.

The problem is stark. The United States has not mined antimony domestically since the early 1990s. China controls roughly 60% of global production and has enacted increasingly aggressive export restrictions, including an outright ban on shipments to the U.S. in late 2024. A Govini supply chain analysis found that more than 80,000 individual weapons parts across nearly 1,900 DoD weapon systems incorporate antimony or related critical minerals. That is not a supply chain vulnerability — that is a national security exposure.

Washington has responded with urgency. The Department of Defense has deployed nearly $400 million in investments and stockpile contracts around domestic antimony production, the most concentrated federal mobilization around a single critical mineral in recent memory. Earlier this year, the DoD disbursed $27 million under the Defense Production Act directly to United States Antimony Corporation (NYSE American: UAMY) — the only domestic processor and finished antimony product manufacturer in the country — to modernize and expand its refining facility in Thompson Falls, Montana, with capacity expected to double to 320 tons per month by year-end.

The other name drawing serious institutional attention is Perpetua Resources (NASDAQ: PPTA). The company broke ground on its Stibnite Gold Project in Idaho in October 2025 after years of permitting work. The project holds 148 million pounds of antimony and is positioned to become the only domestically mined source of the mineral, potentially supplying 35% of annual U.S. antimony demand in its first six years of production. Perpetua has already secured over $70 million in DoD awards and a preliminary $2 billion financing term sheet from the Export-Import Bank of the United States.

From a market standpoint, the global antimony market is currently valued at roughly $2.4 to $2.5 billion. Analysts project it could reach $4.1 to $4.4 billion by the mid-2030s, representing steady annual growth of 5% to 6% over the next decade. Prices have moderated from a record high of nearly $60,000 per tonne reached in mid-2025 following China’s export ban, settling around $25,000 per tonne — still nearly double where they sat two years ago.

The broader context matters here. With the Iran conflict still rattling global supply chains and reshoring emerging as a defining economic policy, the U.S. government’s push to develop domestic critical mineral production is not a trend — it is a structural shift backed by federal dollars and bipartisan political will. For small and microcap investors, that combination of government demand, supply scarcity, and growing commercial applications across defense and advanced technology creates a genuinely compelling long-term setup in a sector that most of the market is still sleeping on.

Antimony may not be a household name yet. It probably will be.

Iran’s Crypto Toll Play on the Strait of Hormuz Just Sent Bitcoin Above $71K

A geopolitical flashpoint became a crypto catalyst on Wednesday morning when reports emerged that Iran is moving to charge oil tankers a $1-per-barrel toll for Strait of Hormuz passage — with payment demanded exclusively in cryptocurrency.

The news hit markets fast. Bitcoin surged past $72,700 before settling above $71,700, a gain of roughly 5% on the session. Solana jumped 7% and Ethereum climbed 8% before both pared their steepest gains. No specific cryptocurrency was designated for payment, which may have contributed to the broad-based rally across the majors.

The Strait of Hormuz is the world’s most consequential oil chokepoint. An estimated 20% of global petroleum supply transits through it daily. Tankers crossing the strait typically carry between 500,000 and 2 million barrels of crude, meaning a single passage could generate a toll ranging from $500,000 to $2 million — paid in digital assets.

Under the proposed framework, shipowners would be required to email Iranian authorities with a full cargo manifest. Iran would then determine the fee for safe passage. Vessels traveling empty would be permitted to cross at no charge. The approach essentially creates a state-sanctioned crypto revenue stream tied directly to one of the world’s most critical energy corridors.

The timing is significant. This development surfaces just a day after President Trump announced a conditional ceasefire with Iran, one that specifically required the immediate and safe reopening of the strait. Iran has been using attacks on vessels in and around the Persian Gulf as leverage in negotiations, and has repeatedly asserted sovereignty over the waterway as a core condition for any peace agreement.

Despite the ceasefire announcement, transit through the strait as of Wednesday morning remained minimal. Maritime intelligence data indicates no meaningful resumption of shipping traffic, and sources in the region expressed skepticism about the near-term stability of the situation. The sentiment shift may be moving faster than actual shipping behavior or insurance underwriting.

The crypto angle here is more than a headline grab. If Iran formalizes a system where sovereign passage fees are collected in digital assets, it represents one of the most significant real-world use cases for cryptocurrency in geopolitical history. It would also signal that sanctioned regimes are increasingly viewing crypto not just as a workaround for dollar-denominated financial systems, but as a legitimate transactional layer for international commerce — even state-enforced commerce.

For crypto investors, this cuts two ways. On one hand, institutional demand signals a meaningful maturation of the asset class. On the other, the association with a sanctioned government conducting what amounts to maritime extortion is the kind of regulatory ammunition that tends to accelerate oversight conversations in Washington.

Oil markets told the other side of the story Wednesday. Crude futures dropped more than 15%, reflecting the prospect of a reopened strait and normalized supply flows — a sharp divergence from crypto’s upward trajectory.

The Strait of Hormuz has long been the pressure valve of global energy markets. What’s new is that it may now be generating pressure on crypto markets too.

Xcel Brands (XELB) – Solid Foundation For Growth In 2026


Wednesday, April 08, 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.

Q4 Results. The company reported Q4 revenue of $1.2 million and an adj. EBITDA loss of $0.6 million, both of which were modestly lower than our estimates of $1.7 million and a loss of $0.5 million, respectively, as illustrated in Figure #1 Q4 Results. Notably, we view 2025 as a transformational year for the company, driven by several key partnerships that position it on a solid foundation for growth in 2026 and beyond. 

Strategic partnerships. The company’s influencer brands, with Jenny Martinez, Gemma Stafford, Cesar Millan, and Coco Rocha, are expected to launch throughout 2026. Notably, these partnerships have driven the company’s social media following from 5 million at the start of 2025 to approximately 46 million today. In our view, the company is well-positioned to reach its goal of 100 million social media followers in 2026.


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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. 

Greenwich LifeSciences, Inc. (GLSI) – New Claims Filed To Expand Patent Estate Covering GP2


Wednesday, April 08, 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 Data Added To Expand Patent Claims. Greenwich LifeSciences announced that it has filed new patent claims to expand the patent estate covering GP2, the proprietary compound in GLSI-100. The new claims add recently announced data from the Phase 3 FLAMINGO-01 trial that show the immune response and recurrence rate for non-HLA*02 patients. These claims could expand both the scope and the term of the patent estate beyond previous claims from HLA*02 patients.

Broadening Patent Protection Protects Against Competitors. Patent claims covering the immune response that results from GLSI-100 treatment could help lock out competitors trying to develop similar compounds. If a new compound were able to avoid patents covering GP2, it would be blocked by the new claims covering the immune response that follows.


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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. 

QuoteMedia Inc. (QMCI) – Revenue Momentum Picks Up


Wednesday, April 08, 2026

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

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

Exceeds Q4 revenue expectations. QuoteMedia reported Q4 revenue of $5.35M (+14% y/y) and FY2025 revenue of $20.3M (+8% y/y), reflecting solid top-line momentum. Profitability declined in the full year 2025, with Adjusted EBITDA of $1.0M (vs. $1.8M prior year) and a net loss of $2.3 million, driven by investment and accounting treatment of development costs.

Key growth drivers. Revenue growth was led by Corporate Quotestream (enterprise), benefiting from larger contracts, higher ARPC, and cross-selling of data and SaaS solutions. Interactive Content revenue increased a strong 18.3%, better than our 8% growth estimate. Earnings were pressured by higher expensing of development costs (vs. capitalization), which impacted reported profitability.


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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.

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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. 

GeoVax Labs (GOVX) – GeoVax Presents Data On New Single-Dose Mpox Vaccine


Wednesday, April 08, 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.

Preclinical Study Compared Single-Dose MVA With Two-Dose Standard Vaccine. GeoVax presented preclinical data at the World Vaccine Congress Washington 2026 comparing its current pre-Phase-3 GEO-MVA vaccine for Mpox with its new MVA-X version. The new MVA-X includes a peptide sequence that elicits a strong T-cell response that requires only one dose to achieve protection instead of two.

Immune Checkpoint Modulation Improves The Response. The new MVA-X includes an immunomodulatory peptide designed to improve T-cell responses. The peptide modulates the PD-1 immune checkpoint pathway to block inhibitory signaling to magnify T-cell activation, improve the durability of the T-cell response, and enhance immune memory.


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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. 

Direct Digital Holdings (DRCT) – Early Signs of Stabilization Emerge


Wednesday, April 08, 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.

Post Q4 investor call. This report provides additional color on the recently reported fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 results and the outlook for 2026 and beyond. We are posting 2027 estimates, which anticipate mid-teen revenue growth and positive adj. EBITDA. 

New customer wins in energy and expanding vertical mix improve growth quality and reduce seasonality.
Buy-side momentum was driven by new customer additions, particularly in the energy vertical and by expansion into education. This diversification is helping stabilize revenue trends and reduce historical second-half weakness.


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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. 

Capital Goods Orders Beat in February, But Middle East Conflict Puts March — and Small-Cap Shippers — on Watch

U.S. business investment showed unexpected resilience in February, but the window may be closing fast.

New orders for core capital goods — the government’s closely watched proxy for business spending — rose 0.6% in February, topping economist forecasts of a 0.4% gain and reversing a revised 0.4% decline in January. Shipments of those same goods climbed 0.9%, adding further evidence that equipment spending was gaining traction heading into the first quarter. The Commerce Department’s Census Bureau released the data Tuesday.

The numbers paint a picture of solid momentum — but one that was captured before the full weight of the U.S.-Israel war with Iran began reshaping the investment landscape. Oil prices have climbed, supply chains are tightening, and businesses that were leaning forward in February are now likely pulling back to reassess.

Orders Show Broad Strength — With One Glaring Exception

February’s gains were driven by solid increases across primary metals, fabricated metal products, and machinery, which jumped 1.5%. Motor vehicles and parts surged 3.1%. The broad picture was encouraging for domestic manufacturers.

The one glaring exception: commercial aircraft. Boeing reported just 21 civilian aircraft orders in February, down sharply from 107 in January — a 28.6% collapse in commercial aircraft orders that dragged overall durable goods orders down 1.4% for the month. Defense aircraft orders also fell 3.8%.

Durable goods as a category declined for the second consecutive month, though stripping out the volatile transportation segment, orders actually rose a healthy 0.8%.

Supply Chains Are Already Feeling the Pressure

Perhaps the most forward-looking signal in Tuesday’s data wasn’t in the orders figures at all — it was in what’s happening to delivery times. An Institute for Supply Management manufacturing survey released last week showed supplier delivery times stretching to a four-year high in March, a direct consequence of the geopolitical disruption rippling through global logistics networks.

That’s a number that matters deeply to companies like EuroDry (NASDAQ: EDRY) and Euroseas (NASDAQ: ESEA), both dry bulk operators that move iron ore, coal, grains, and other bulk commodities across ocean routes. Longer delivery windows mean more time at sea per cargo cycle, which can translate to tighter effective vessel supply and, in some market conditions, upward pressure on charter rates. EuroDry posted a strong Q4 2025 earnings beat in February and has expanded its forward charter book heading into 2026 — but the Iran conflict introduces a new variable around route disruption and fuel costs that management will need to navigate carefully.

For FreightCar America (NASDAQ: RAIL), the February machinery and motor vehicle data is directionally constructive. The company entered 2026 projecting growth, backed by a strong backlog and expanding margins. But if industrial order momentum stalls in March and April as businesses hit pause on capex decisions — as many economists now expect — railcar demand tied to manufacturing output could soften in the back half of the year.

The AI Wildcard

One consistent bright spot cutting through the uncertainty: artificial intelligence. Data center construction and the infrastructure buildout supporting AI workloads continue to drive demand for raw materials, electricity, and the bulk commodities that companies like EuroDry and Euroseas specialize in moving. That structural tailwind isn’t going away regardless of where energy prices settle.

February’s capital goods data was a genuine beat. The question now is whether it’s the last clean read for a while — or a foundation that holds even as the macro backdrop gets more complicated.