No.
Because you are not a lifting noob you have reached the reality of the double edged sword. This being that you physically cannot "swap" muscle for fat. You must choose to increase muscle mass (bulk) or lose fat (cut). At this point, unless your calorie intake is such that it is still in surplus despite the amount of cardio youre doing, you will not see muscle gain. Likewise, unless your caloric intake is such that you are at a 10% or greater deficit, you will not notice significant fat loss.
In other words, your doing the doggie paddle of the fitness world that 98% of frequent fitness participants dont realize they are doing.
Make the choice. If you want to gain more mass before cutting the fat, then increase your calorie intake and increase your lifting intensity. If you are satisfied with the mass you have, decrease your calorie intake (while maintaining a healthy protein intake) and keep the cardio and lifting where it's at. Though increasing lifiting intensity can never hurt.
That is the real deal.
-edit: I just re-read it. You do very little lifting. Everything I said still applies, but you need to lift heavy stuff. Add a basic lifting routine to your schedule, adjust your diet according to your goal, and you will realize your new goals.