Rick's Market Brief

Wednesday, May 27, 2026 — Curated by Raphael for Rick Shea
S&P futures +0.1% to +0.3%
Nasdaq futures +0.3% to +0.45%
Dow futures +0.2% to +0.46%
Nikkei ~flat
Kospi +2.5%
Hang Seng -1.0%
CSI 300 -0.8%
Stoxx 600 +0.3%
Brent ~$96.6 (-3.0%)
10Y UST ~4.47% (-3bp)
5Y UST ~4.17%
DXY ~99.10 (-0.07%)
EUR/USD 1.1645
~6-minute audio brief Hedge fund + macro + regulation, narrated.

Top Story

Consumer/Retail Earnings

Dick's Sporting Goods Q1 FY26 Beats Top And Bottom Pre-Open — Net Sales $5.17B vs $5.06B Est, Adj EPS $2.90 vs $2.86 Est; First Consolidated Quarter With Foot Locker Returns To Positive Comps And Profitability; Full-Year Guidance Raised

The cleanest consumer-retail print of the cycle dropped pre-open. Dick's Sporting Goods (DKS) reported Q1 FY26 net sales of $5.17B versus the $5.06B Street consensus and adjusted EPS of $2.90 versus $2.86 estimate, with net income of $319.8M and GAAP EPS of $3.54. The standout: this is the first full quarter consolidating Foot Locker after the acquisition closed, and Foot Locker returned to positive comparable sales and profitability inside DKS's reporting line — far ahead of the bear-case integration timeline. Management raised full-year 2026 guidance on both comparable sales and profitability, with Ed Stack explicitly calling sport "one of the hottest categories in the country today."

For Vardon's seat this is the read of the day. The DKS print confirms the bifurcation thesis Rick has been pricing: specialty consumer with category authority is taking share and pricing while general-line retail flounders. Bath & Body Works reported the same morning, beating Q1 guidance on $1.38B net sales (-3% YoY) and adjusted EPS $0.32 vs $0.29 est — but BBWI sales are still down YoY, its CFO Eva Boratto is stepping down June 12, and the consumer-first turnaround is mid-implementation. The DKS/BBWI split is exactly the trade-down-with-category-discipline screen: category leaders compound; legacy mall-anchored brands grind. Combine with yesterday's AutoZone beat and the activist pressure into Target's June 10 vote, and the hedge-fund consumer book has a clean read into Q2: long category leaders with operating leverage, short or pair against governance-impaired generalists. Pre-market reaction will set the tape for Best Buy tomorrow and Costco/Lululemon later this week.

Hedge Fund & Investment Management

Consumer/Retail Earnings

Bath & Body Works Q1 FY26: Net Sales $1.38B (-3% YoY), Adj EPS $0.32 vs $0.29 Est, FY26 Guide Reaffirmed (Sales -4.5% To -2.5%) — CFO Eva Boratto Steps Down June 12, Tom Javitch Interim; Q1 Buoyed By $88M Interchange-Fee Settlement Gain

Bath & Body Works (BBWI) beat Q1 guidance pre-open but printed the kind of "messy beat" that punishes a stock with a fragile multiple. Net sales of $1.38B were down 3% YoY; diluted EPS of $0.90 (vs $0.49 LY) and adjusted EPS of $0.32 (vs $0.29 Street estimate). Operating income $231M, up from $209M. The Q1 print included an $88M pre-tax gain from payment card interchange-fee litigation settlements, a $62M tax benefit from resolved tax matters, plus offsetting transformation costs and a debt-extinguishment loss. The company reaffirmed FY26 guidance for net sales declining 4.5% to 2.5% and adjusted diluted EPS of $2.40 to $2.65. Layered on top: CFO Eva Boratto is stepping down June 12, 2026; Tom Javitch becomes interim CFO. The "Consumer First Formula" turnaround is still mid-implementation per management. For Vardon: clean read on the slow-bleed end of specialty retail — even with one-timers flattering reported numbers, the underlying top-line is still negative, the CFO is exiting, and the multiple is doing the work. Pairs cleanly short against DKS or category-leader longs.

Macro Oil

Brent Crashes To ~$96.57 (-3% Overnight) As Iran Peace-Framework Optimism Eclipses Strait-Of-Hormuz Tail — 10Y UST Eases To 4.47%, DXY Flatlines ~99.10; AI Rally + Cheaper Oil Lift Stoxx 600 +0.3%, US Futures Modestly Bid Into US Open

The geopolitical risk-premium that whipsawed the tape Monday-Tuesday compressed sharply overnight. Brent crude futures fell to roughly $96.57/bbl, down 3.02% from the prior session — a fresh ~5-week low — on growing optimism around a US-Iran peace agreement, even with the Strait of Hormuz still closed and hostilities technically ongoing. The 10Y Treasury yield eased to 4.47% (-3bp), the 5Y to 4.17%, both at their lowest in nearly two weeks as investors trim near-term Fed-hike expectations. The DXY is flatlining ~99.10; EUR/USD ticked up to 1.1645. The overnight tape rewarded the same AI-tech complex that drove Tuesday's S&P/Nasdaq record close: US futures up 0.1-0.45%, Stoxx 600 +0.3%, Kospi +2.5% on Samsung after a wage-deal averted strike. Asia split: Hang Seng -1.0%, CSI 300 -0.8% on lingering geopolitical concern; Nikkei roughly flat at all-time-high pivots. For Vardon: cheaper oil + lower yields + still-firm equity tape is the precise combination that extends the consumer-discretionary trade-down beta — gasoline price relief feeds disposable income, lower belly yields support housing wealth-effect, and the AI rotation hasn't crowded out the consumer carry. The asymmetric risk now is a Hormuz incident that re-rates Brent back through $100 and undoes the carry trade in a single headline.

Manager News M&A

AGF Management To Lift Stake In New Holland Capital To 50% Effective May 29 — Convertible Note Plus $20M Additional Cash; NHC AUM +44% Since Feb 2024 To $7.8B, Multi-Strategy Platform; Modestly Accretive To AGF Earnings

The cleanest manager-level deal of the day. AGF Management Limited announced it will increase its economic ownership of New Holland Capital, LLC (NHC) to 50% effective May 29, 2026, converting an existing convertible note into equity and adding a $20M USD cash investment on top. NHC is a New York-based multi-strategy hedge fund platform with $7.8B AUM, up 44% from $5.4B in February 2024. AGF flagged the transaction as modestly accretive to earnings. The signal for Rick's seat: continued institutional consolidation of mid-sized multi-strat platforms under publicly-traded asset-management parents — the same pattern that's driven Marshall Wace's BNP tie-up, Walleye/CommonStock equity stakes, and the broader "platform-on-platform" capital migration. Meaningful AUM growth at NHC over a 27-month stretch when industry net flows have been negative (North American HF flows -$170B 2016-2025; -$116B in 2025 alone) suggests the right multi-strat product still raises capital — it's the generalist book that's bleeding. Worth tracking which platform sponsors get acquired next; the screen is mid-sized multi-strat managers with verifiable Sharpe and operational maturity.

Manager News Retail Distribution

BofA Initiates Coverage On Pershing Square Holdings — Calls Ackman's Vehicle A "Baby Buffett" On Permanent Capital + Concentrated Investing + Scalable Fee Economics; Frames Retail-Distribution Of Hedge Fund Exposure As Multi-Year Tailwind

Bank of America initiated coverage of Pershing Square Holdings overnight with a deliberately Buffett-coded framing: "Baby Buffett" — a comparison built on the firm's permanent-capital structure, concentrated investing approach, and scalable fee economics. The thesis from BofA: this is the model that democratizes hedge-fund exposure for retail, and the retail-hedge-fund distribution thread is now a multi-year industry tailwind, not a one-off. The broader picture: hedge funds have generally lagged the broad US equity market in April 2026 (less than half the broad-market return) even as headline AI bets compounded. Allocators are tilting toward strategies with persistent alpha signatures — quant and discretionary macro especially — and away from broad multi-strat beta-takers. For Vardon's positioning intelligence: the retail-distribution channel is real and structurally widening, but the alpha bar is also rising. Permanent-capital + concentrated discipline is the structural answer institutions want to see. Worth a careful read against Vardon's own capital structure and product roadmap.

Activist Consumer/Retail

Target Activist Coalition Goes Public Again Into June 10 Vote — Trillium/SOC/Mercy Urge Vote Against Cornell And Lead Director; Backdrop Is Stronger Q1 Print But Lingering Governance + DEI Backlash; Toms Capital Stake Builds The Engagement Ceiling

The Target governance fight stayed in the headlines this morning. The activist coalition of Trillium Asset Management, SOC Investment Group, and Mercy Investment Services continued urging shareholders to vote against the re-election of Brian Cornell and Lead Independent Director Christine Leahy at the June 10 annual meeting, citing operational/strategic missteps and DEI-policy backlash even though Target's Q1 2026 sales beat expectations. Toms Capital Investment Management has reportedly built a significant stake, increasing the credible engagement ceiling. The setup for Vardon: TGT is now the rare "stronger fundamentals + active governance overhang" stock — June 10 is the binary catalyst. Pairs naturally against the DKS-style category-leader longs as a governance-impaired generalist short, but watch the vote — a successful shareholder push to remove Cornell or restructure the board would re-rate the stock sharply on capital-allocation expectations.

Regulation & Compliance

Form PF Reporting

Form PF Comment Window Now ~4 Weeks From Close (June 23) — $10B Large-HF Threshold, Section 6 PE Eliminated, Private-Credit Reporting Still Solicited; 2024-Amendment Compliance Date Holds At Oct 1, 2026

The joint SEC/CFTC Form PF amendment proposal is firmly in the final stretch of its public-comment window — comments due June 23, 2026, less than four weeks out. Recap of the mechanics for the seat: the minimum Form PF reporting threshold lifts from $150M to $1B in private-fund AUM (eliminates filing for the long tail); the "large hedge fund adviser" threshold lifts from $1.5B to $10B, which the SEC itself estimates would eliminate reporting obligations for almost two-thirds of currently-classified large HF advisers; all Section 6 PE quarterly event reporting eliminated; large-HF Section 5 current reporting moves from "as soon as practicable" to a definitive 72-hour window; periodic five-year staff review of thresholds baked in. The agencies are separately soliciting comment on whether to define and require new reporting specifically for private-credit funds — the live policy thread to track. The 2024-amendment compliance date holds at October 1, 2026, with the new proposal potentially superseding many of those obligations. Not actionable today, but consequential for the medium-term compliance overhead and the private-credit product calculus.

SEC Focus 2026 Enforcement

SEC's 2026 Enforcement Lens On Investment Managers Firming Up — Fee Disclosure, Marketing Rule (Testimonials/Endorsements/Third-Party Ratings), Reg S-P Cyber Amendments, AI Oversight, AML All In Active Scope

Fresh legal-commentariat read of the SEC's 2026 priorities for investment advisers continues to settle around the same priority axes. Active focus areas: fraud and fiduciary breaches; undisclosed conflicts of interest; heightened scrutiny on fee disclosures; Marketing Rule compliance — particularly testimonials, endorsements, and third-party ratings; cybersecurity and AI oversight; and amendments to Regulation S-P requiring strengthened data security and AML programs. The Marketing Rule thread continues to be the highest-frequency enforcement lever in the asset-management book — testimonials, endorsements, third-party ratings, and hypothetical performance presentations all have heightened audit exposure. For Vardon: keep the marketing-rule documentation tight, particularly anything that references third-party industry rankings or endorsement-adjacent language; the SEC's rescission of the "no-deny" settlement policy last week reshapes the post-settlement reputational calculus but doesn't change the upstream enforcement priorities.

AI & Alternative Investments

AI Hedge Fund Launch

Lumenai Innovation Fund On Track For ~June 1 Launch With "Fully Agentic" AI Architecture — Autonomous AI Agents Generate/Evaluate/Manage Ideas Under Human Governance; Global Equity Long-Short Mandate Targets Low Correlation To Traditional Markets

The Lumenai Innovation Fund remains on track for its approximately June 1, 2026 launch — one of the first institutional hedge funds built on a "fully agentic" AI architecture. The structure: autonomous AI agents continuously generate, evaluate, and manage investment ideas, while humans retain governance, risk, and strategic oversight. The mandate is global equity long-short, explicitly targeting low correlation to traditional markets. For Vardon: this is the cleanest public marker of the agentic-AI investment-management frontier — over the next 6-12 months Lumenai will produce the first credible institutional performance differential between fully-agentic and conventional discretionary/systematic funds. The interpretive question isn't whether agentic systems can generate signals — it's whether the human-in-the-loop premium holds up versus systems where humans only set boundary conditions. Watch the early-quarter performance attribution disclosures carefully.

AI Tools for Investment Management

What's actually new on the desk.

Mega OS Launch

RJF Pro Unveils Mega OS — Next-Gen AI Quantitative System For US Market; Focuses On Applying AI To Transaction Logic And Mitigating Human Emotional Bias In Sophisticated Market Participation

Fresh launch this morning: RJF Pro Ltd unveiled Mega OS, a next-generation AI quantitative system targeted at the US market. Positioning per the launch material: applying AI to transaction logic and mitigating human emotional bias in sophisticated market participation. Translation for the desk: this is another execution-side orchestration product rather than an idea-generation engine — squarely in the same operational layer where MoTA, Liquid's Co-Invest, and a handful of agentic-execution products are now stacking up. The 2026 pattern continues to firm: the commercial gradient is steepest in execution + workflow orchestration, not in raw research output. For Vardon, the read is unchanged: buy execution-side orchestration once products stabilize; resist building.

Co-Invest ChatGPT/Claude

Liquid Launches Co-Invest — Conduct Market Analysis And Execute Trades Directly Inside ChatGPT And Claude; Aims To Compress The Market-Inquiry-To-Live-Trading Path

Liquid announced the launch of Co-Invest, an application that lets users conduct market analysis and execute trades directly within AI assistants like ChatGPT and Claude. The stated goal: streamline the transition from market inquiry to live trading by collapsing the lookup-to-execution path inside a single conversational interface. The product sits at the workflow-collapse edge of the AI tooling stack — interesting less for institutional adoption (the compliance surface is significant) and more as a signal about which interface layer wins for individual professional users: native AI chat interfaces vs. terminal-style platforms. For institutional desks like Vardon's, the relevant lesson is the direction of UX gravity, not the product itself — research-to-execution paths inside conversational assistants are now a credible competitive vector for retail-adjacent brokerages.

TIFIN Australia Regional Launch

TIFIN Australia Officially Launches To Drive AI-Powered Wealth Innovation In The Region — TIFIN.AI Platform Provides Wealth, Asset Management, And Insurance AI Solutions

Yesterday's regional-expansion data point: TIFIN Australia officially launched May 26, 2026 to drive AI-powered wealth innovation in the Australian region. The underlying TIFIN.AI platform provides AI solutions across wealth management, asset management, and insurance. Less directly actionable for Vardon than the orchestration launches, but a useful read on the capital-pool geography of AI wealth-tech: the same platforms are now landing in APAC alongside their US footprints, which means North-American allocator due-diligence on AI tooling will need to factor multi-region operational maturity sooner rather than later.