I wonder if the following inequality involving skew symmetric matrices is true: 

Suppose that $B,C \in \mathbb{R}^{d \times d}$ are skew-symmetric matrices, and $\Sigma \in \mathbb{R}^{d \times d}$ is positive-definite. Then, 

$$\mbox{Tr}\left((B^2)^T \Sigma B^2\right) \mbox{Tr}\left((C^2)^T \Sigma C^2\right) \geq \left[\frac{1}{4} \mbox{Tr}\left((BC + CB)^T \Sigma (BC + CB)\right)\right]^2 $$ 

When $\Sigma = I_d$ it seems to almost reduce to Cauchy-Schwartz after a little rearrangement of the RHS -- in fact, if B,C commute, it does follow from Cauchy-Schwartz. However, if $\Sigma \neq I_d$, even if the matrices commute, it doesn't reduce to a "different norm" Cauchy-Schwartz. 

Any relevant tools/inequalities appreciated!