billS4760Event Thursday, June 11, 2026Analyzed

A bill to amend the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 to extend the authorities of title VII of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, and for other purposes.

Neutral

Summary

S.4760 is a procedural one-week extension of FISA Title VII authorities from June 12 to June 19, 2026. It carries zero new funding, zero new programs, and zero sector-level market impact. The bill is at the earliest legislative stage, referred to committee, with no further action. No public companies have a direct revenue or compliance chain from this extension.

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Key Takeaways

  • 1.S.4760 is a 7-day technical extension of FISA Title VII authorities, not a policy change.
  • 2.Zero funding, zero new programs, zero sector impact.
  • 3.No publicly traded companies have a material causal chain from this bill's mechanism.
  • 4.Bill is at the earliest legislative stage with minimal momentum.

Market Implications

This bill has no market implications. It is a routine one-week reauthorization that maintains the status quo for surveillance authorities. No publicly traded company's revenue, costs, or competitive position is affected by the difference between a June 12 and June 19 expiration date. Retail investors should place no weight on this event.

Full Analysis

S.4760, introduced by Sen. Cotton on June 11, 2026, simply strikes two references to 'June 12, 2026' in the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 and replaces them with 'June 19, 2026'. This is a one-week stopgap extension of existing surveillance authorities — no policy changes, no funding, no new compliance obligations for any private sector entity. The bill was read twice and referred to the Select Committee on Intelligence, the earliest possible stage. No further actions have occurred. There is no money trail — the bill authorizes $0 and appropriates $0. No publicly traded company is directly affected by a one-week procedural delay of a repeal date for intelligence collection authorities that primarily impact foreign targets, not domestic corporate operations. The convergence context provided is empty, confirming this bill is an isolated procedural move. The only structural implication is temporary certainty for telecom and internet companies that comply with FISA orders, but the extension is so brief and routine that it does not constitute a material market signal.

Key Legislators

Sen. Cotton, Tom [R-AR]

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