BILL ANALYSIS
SJRES107
BULLISHA joint resolution providing for congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code, of the rule submitted by the Internal Revenue Service relating to "Beginning of Construction Requirements for Purposes of the Termination of Clean Electricity Production Credits and Clean Electricity Investment Credits for Applicable Wind and Solar Facilities".
SJRES107 (A joint resolution providing for congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code, of the rule submitted by the Internal Revenue Service relating to "Beginning of Construction Requirements for Purposes of the Termination of Clean Electricity Production Credits and Clean Electricity Investment Credits for Applicable Wind and Solar Facilities".) carries an AI-assessed market impact score of 7/10 with a bullish outlook for investors. This legislation directly affects First Solar ($FSLR), Enphase Energy ($ENPH) and NextEra Energy ($NEE). The primary sectors impacted are Energy, Utilities and Finance. View the full bill text on Congress.gov.
7/10
Impact Score
bullish
Market Sentiment
3
Affected Stocks
3
Sectors Impacted
Key Takeaways for Investors
S.J.Res.107 died in the Senate 47-53, preserving the IRS rule that terminates clean electricity credits—but paradoxically the rule's existence doesn't matter because the rule itself TERMINATEs credits; the worse outcome for renewables would have been the rule being blocked, meaning Congress would then have to affirmatively agree to keep credits. The bill's failure is actually neutral-to-positive because it removes uncertainty around regulatory reversal.
Tax equity markets for solar and wind remain fully functional through 2027-2033, supporting ~$20B/year in credit transactions that underpin utility-scale development financing.
$NEE shows the strongest relative performance near its 52-week high, reflecting market confidence in its renewable development pipeline under the current tax regime, while $ENPH struggles with company-specific headwinds that offset the regulatory tailwind.
How SJRES107 Affects the Market
The failed disapproval vote removes a tail risk for clean energy tax credits but creates no new upside catalyst. The market had already discounted the resolution's passage risk after the Feb 12 introduction failed to gain GOP cosponsors beyond 4. $NEE at $96.17 near its 52-week high suggests the regulatory risk was already priced out. $FSLR at $196.16 remains volatile but benefits from preserved module demand. $ENPH at $32.65 continues to underperform, indicating that company-specific headwinds (California NEM 3.0, pricing competition) dominate the regulatory picture. The sector is now back to normal business-cycle risks: interest rates, interconnection queues, and state-level policy, not federal tax credit repeal.
Bill Details
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Bill Number | SJRES107 |
| Impact Score | 7/10Certainty: Floor action (+0.3 velocity (7 actions)) · Financial Magnitude: $20.0B — major funding · Strategic Weight: AI qualitative assessment: 6/10 · Market Penetration: 3 companies directly affected across 3 sectors |
| Market Sentiment | bullish |
| Event Date | |
| Affected Sectors | Energy, Utilities, Finance |
| Affected Stocks | First Solar ($FSLR), Enphase Energy ($ENPH), NextEra Energy ($NEE) |
| Source | View on Congress.gov → |
Summary
The Senate defeated S.J.Res.107 (47-53) which sought to disapprove IRS Notice 2025-42 that would have terminated clean electricity tax credits for wind and solar. The rule remains in effect, preserving the 30% Investment Tax Credit and Production Tax Credit for projects starting construction before 2033. This removes near-term regulatory risk for the tax equity market supporting utility-scale and distributed solar and wind development. The vote failed on party lines, with Democrats blocking the disapproval, indicating partisan division continues but the current policy status quo protects the sector through 2027.