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Montly Business Insights – April

What you should know
Incentives, Grants & Opportunities

Amber Grant for Women
MAY: Mental & Emotional Support Category

May’s Amber Grant Business Category focuses on Mental & Emotional Support businesses, including counseling services, wellness coaching, stress management, therapy practices, and employee assistance program providers. For Puerto Rico-based women entrepreneurs in healthcare, behavioral health, or wellness industries, this is a timely opportunity. A single application covers the monthly grant, startup grant (if applicable), and the category grant automatically.

Deadline: Rolling monthly — apply by May 31 for May cycle
Amount: $10,000/month per grant type; $50,000 year-end award
PR Eligibility: Confirmed — Open to businesses in the United States and its territories, including Puerto Rico

JUNE: Business Support Services Category

June’s Amber Grant Business Category is Business Support Services — covering accounting, consulting, staffing, legal services, HR, training, coaching, and similar professional services. This is a particularly strong match for many PRMSDC-network member firms that provide supply chain, compliance, management, or technology services to corporate clients. Women-owned businesses in the professional services space should target June as a prime application window.

Deadline: Rolling monthly — apply by June 30 for June cycle
Amount: $10,000/month per grant type; $50,000 year-end award
PR Eligibility: Confirmed — Open to businesses in the United States and its territories, including Puerto Rico
Learn more →

Breva Thrive Grant(Q2 Cycle opens April 1) APRIL-MAY

The Breva Thrive Grant awards $5,000 in unrestricted quarterly funding to one small business demonstrating measurable positive impact in underrepresented communities. Sponsored by Breva (Cadence Financial Group), this grant is designed for for-profit businesses creating jobs and economic opportunities in underserved areas. Q2 applications open April 1, 2026. Breva explicitly lists Puerto Rico and U.S. territories as eligible regions, making this one of the most PR-accessible grant programs available.

Deadline: Q2 opens April 1, 2026 — apply before Q2 close
Amount: $5,000 unrestricted grant (awarded quarterly)
PR Eligibility: Region listed as United States, D.C., Puerto Rico, and U.S. Territories
Learn more →

Upcoming Business Events
SME FUSION 2026
May 5–6, 2026
Nashville, TN
The leading workforce-focused manufacturing event, delivering practical strategies for building talent pipelines, onboarding efficiently, upskilling employees, and preserving institutional knowledge.
🎥 🔥Watch video
Learn More →
Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit
May 19–20, 2026
Atlanta, GA
Brings together business and HR leaders to explore the future of work, AI in the enterprise, workforce strategy, and building resilient organizations for an era of rapid technological change.
Personal Information – Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit 2026Learn More →
SHRM Annual Conference 2026
June 16-19, 2026
Orlando, FL
The largest HR conference in the world, covering workforce strategy, AI in people operations, compliance, and talent development. Particularly valuable in a year when Deloitte research shows 80% of manufacturers are investing at least 20% of improvement budgets in smart manufacturing — creating new skill-gap and workforce-planning demands.
Learn more →Register Today →
Gartner IT Symposium/Xpo 2026
October 19-22, 2026
Orlando, FL
The world’s most important gathering for CIOs and IT executives. Gartner analysts present the Top 10 Strategic Technology Trends shaping the next five years, with deep sessions on agentic AI, preemptive cybersecurity, AI-native development, and domain-specific language models. Highly relevant for the 29 Information-sector firms and any executive overseeing digital transformation.
Learn more →
Register NOW →
What may benefit your company
Puerto Rico Economic Activity Index (EDB-EAI) — Revised FY 2025 Data Shows Growth
Puerto Rico’s Economic Activity Index (EDB-EAI) — the island’s most watched coincident indicator tracking employment, cement sales, gasoline consumption, and electric power generation — was revised upward to show +0.8% growth in calendar year 2024 and a +2.9% gain in fiscal year 2024. Focus Economics reports FY 2025 expanded to a modest +0.3%, with Q1 FY 2026 still in mild year-over-year contraction but Q2 FY 2026 turning more optimistic on stronger retail sales and improving PMI readings. Executives should treat BDE’s monthly EAI release as a core input to revenue forecasting and capacity planning — particularly in cement, transportation, retail, and energy-linked sectors.
Pair with the NY Fed’s Puerto Rico regional dashboard at https://www.newyorkfed.org/regional-economy/puerto-ricoRegional_PuertoRicoPuerto Rico – FEDERAL RESERVE BANK of NEW YORKPowerPoint Presentation

SBA HUBZone Map Update — July 1, 2026 Redesignation Expirations
The SBA will update the HUBZone map in 2026 to reflect expiring Redesignated Areas. HUBZones that became redesignated areas at the 2023 map update will expire on July 1, 2026 — meaning PR-based firms whose principal office or workforce residency depends on those tracts will lose HUBZone eligibility unless they qualify under another category (Qualified Census Tract, Qualified Non-Metropolitan County, Governor-Designated Area, or Qualified Disaster Area). PR has historically had broad HUBZone coverage, and HUBZone-certified firms enjoy set-aside contract eligibility plus a 10% price evaluation preference in full and open federal competitions. Action items: (1) verify your principal office location on the SBA HUBZone map tool, (2) confirm at least 35% of employees continue to reside in a qualifying HUBZone, and (3) if your area is set to expire, document alternative qualification pathways or plan for portfolio diversification ahead of the July deadline. 💡Learn More (SBA HUBZone):https://www.sba.gov/federal-contracting/contracting-assistance-programs/hubzone-program
💡Learn More (PR Federal Contracting Center): https://www.federalcontracting.ddec.pr.gov/

Puerto Rico Energy Rate Case Concluded — FY 2026–2028 Investment Plan Pending
Following the December 2025 conclusion of evidentiary hearings before the Puerto Rico Energy Bureau (PREB), the consolidated rate review involving LUMA, Genera PR, and PREPA has moved to the decision phase. LUMA submitted two investment plans: an “Optimal Budget” representing approximately $3.45 billion in new T&D investment from 2025–2028 (projected to reduce outage duration by 14% and outage frequency by 12%) and a “Constrained Budget” with slower implementation. For executives, the near-term implications are material: energy-bill volatility is likely to persist into FY 2026–2028, backup power and on-site solar/storage continue to deliver strong ROI, and businesses with energy-intensive operations (manufacturing, cold storage, data services, food service) should update contingency plans, evaluate Act 60 energy-resilience tax credits, and model sensitivity to a potential rate increase tied to the final PREB order.
💡Learn More (LUMA): https://lumapr.com/

What works
Position Puerto Rico for the Reshoring Wave
The current trade-policy environment has elevated Puerto Rico’s strategic value as a nearshoring and reshoring destination. As a U.S. territory, PR offers no tariff exposure on shipments to the mainland, full U.S. legal protections, and established supplier networks in pharmaceuticals (12 of the world’s top 20 pharma companies operate on-island), medical devices (70+ FDA-approved plants), and advanced manufacturing. InvestPR reports 626 new businesses established in FY 2025 with commitments of 4,900 jobs and $733 million in investment — a 76.2% increase over the prior year. Deloitte’s 2026 Manufacturing Industry Outlook found that 80% of manufacturers plan to allocate 20%+ of their improvement budgets to smart manufacturing, and that supply-chain resilience remains the top strategic concern for 78% of executives. For PRMSDC-network suppliers, this creates a durable window to position as a Tier-2 or Tier-3 supplier to mainland OEMs actively diversifying their sourcing footprint.

Practical steps to consider:Update your capability statement to explicitly name tariff mitigation, reshoring readiness, and U.S.-jurisdiction advantages.Register on SAM.gov and refresh your SBS (Small Business Search, which replaced DSBS in 2025) profile to make sure corporate and federal buyers can find you.Target outreach to mainland OEMs in pharma, medical devices, aerospace, and electronics assembly that are publicly announcing nearshoring initiatives.Consider layered certifications: NMSDC MBE + 8(a) + HUBZone (while HUBZone eligibility lasts) to maximize set-aside access.

Learn more:Reshoring 
Reference: InvestPRDeloitte 2026 Manufacturing Outlook

Extend Asset Life and Reduce Operating Costs
Most organizations facing aging assets and rising maintenance costs aren’t neglecting the work — they’re doing “good enough” work within a broken system, according to Daniel Penn Associates. The firm’s guidance for 2026 argues that controlling maintenance costs and extending asset life requires two disciplines working together, not in isolation: process excellence (lean, Six Sigma, and theory of constraints applied to maintenance workflows) and condition-based monitoring (servicing equipment based on actual condition, not the calendar). For PRMSDC-network manufacturers, contractors, and facility operators, the payoff is measurable — longer equipment life, fewer surprise breakdowns, higher OEE, and reduced capital intensity.

Practical steps to consider:Move preventive maintenance off the calendar and onto actual equipment condition data.Write work orders that specify the what, how, and why — not just the task.Focus limited maintenance resources on the few constraints most affecting performance.Shift technicians from “firefighting” to root-cause problem-solving.

Reference: https://www.danielpenn.com/how-to-extend-asset-life-and-reduce-costs/ 


Top Headlines in Business

(Birling Capital / WJournal PR) — Think Strategically: When Markets Are Rattled, the Signal Remains, and Your Strategy Should Not Waver
Birling Capital’s latest Think Strategically column, authored by President & CEO Francisco Rodríguez-Castro and published in WJournal Puerto Rico and The Caribbean (powered by El Vocero), tackles the intersection of geopolitical risk, energy-driven inflation, and monetary policy constraints shaping today’s investment environment. The central thesis is deliberate: markets change, investor goals do not, and neither should strategy. The column frames the ongoing Iran conflict as a structural variable — no longer a headline risk but a persistent driver of global energy pricing and inflation expectations — with oil approaching levels not seen since 2022, headline CPI projected near 3.5%, and the Federal Reserve’s 2% target delayed for a sixth consecutive year. The Nasdaq’s roughly 11% correction from its peak and the 10-year Treasury closing at 4.44% represent a meaningful valuation reset, creating selective entry points in fixed income (yields not available since late 2023) and international developed equities (trading at a material discount to the S&P 500).

🔍 Read More: (Birling Capital): https://www.birlingcapital.com/ Published In: WJournal 🔍 Puerto Rico and The Caribbean / El Vocero — https://www.wjournalpr.com/

(McKinsey) — CIOs Are Becoming Strategy Architects: Global Tech Agenda 2026
McKinsey’s Global Tech Agenda 2026, based on a survey of more than 600 C-level executives, finds that leading companies are weaving AI and data into their operating models to build intelligence-driven enterprises. The report identifies four strategic imperatives: becoming embedded in CEO-level strategy, scaling agentic AI that autonomously plans and acts across workflows, monetizing data assets, and building top AI talent and team capabilities.

🔍 Read More: McKinsey Global Tech Agenda 2026

(NY Fed / EDB-BDE) — Puerto Rico Economy Shows Uneven but Resilient Performance
The NY Fed’s Puerto Rico dashboard and the revised EDB-EAI show a nuanced picture heading into Q2 FY 2026: calendar year 2024 posted +0.8% growth, FY 2024 closed at +2.9%, FY 2025 expanded a modest +0.3%, and Q1 FY 2026 remained in year-over-year contraction for the 13th straight month through September — though the contraction is narrowing. Tourism got a boost from Bad Bunny’s 31 July–September residency concerts, October retail sales posted the strongest monthly growth since March, and the manufacturing PMI climbed through October–November. For executives, the data supports a cautiously optimistic stance: PR is not in an acute downturn, but growth is uneven by sector, and companies with disciplined cost structures and diversified revenue mixes are best positioned to capitalize on the anticipated late-FY 2026 recovery.

🔍 Read More (NY Fed): https://www.newyorkfed.org/regional-economy/puerto-rico
🔍 Read More (BDE): https://www.bde.pr.gov/BDEPROnline/Home/PRED

(McKinsey) — Agentic AI and Human Collaboration: Redesign Domains, Not Just Use Cases
A McKinsey article published March 4, 2026 argues that to create real value from AI agents and human workers operating together, companies must focus on redesigning entire business domains — not just launching isolated use cases. The analysis finds that companies seeing the biggest returns from agentic AI are those that break down departmental walls and rethink end-to-end workflows, rather than layering AI onto existing processes. The article uses JPMorgan Chase as a case study, noting the firm’s $18 billion annual technology investment has enabled faster product launches, improved risk management, and enterprise-wide use of generative AI — contributing to a price-to-book ratio consistently above its peer group. For Puerto Rico’s manufacturing and life sciences ecosystem, the message is clear: AI strategy must be operational strategy.

🔍 Read More: McKinsey — AI Agents and Human Collaboration