A bill to amend the Food, Agriculture, Conservation, and Trade Act of 1990 to provide for high-priority research and extension grants for natural climate solutions, and for other purposes.
Summary
S4725 is an early-stage Senate bill authorizing research grants for natural climate solutions in agriculture, with no appropriated funding. Impact on publicly traded agriculture companies is procedural and negligible in the near term.
See which stocks are affected
Key takeaways, market implications, full AI analysis, and connected signals are available to HillSignal members.
Already have an account? Log in
Key Takeaways
- 1.S4725 is an early-stage authorization bill with no funded amount and no House companion.
- 2.The bill's impact on publicly traded ag companies is negligible and years away from any potential revenue effect.
- 3.Authorizing research grants does not guarantee any company receives funds; actual spending requires a separate appropriations bill.
Market Implications
The current market environment for agriculture stocks is driven by commodity prices, input costs, and trade policy — not by this standalone research bill. and have no exposure to any federal contract or tax credit in this legislation. The 4 cosponsors and single committee referral indicate low legislative momentum in a divided Congress. Any analysis pricing this bill into ag stock valuations would be premature.
Full Analysis
On June 9, 2026, Senator Markey (D-MA) introduced S4725, a bill to amend the Food, Agriculture, Conservation, and Trade Act of 1990 to create high-priority research and extension grants for natural climate solutions. The bill was read twice and referred to the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry. It is in the earliest legislative stage with no committee hearings, no companion bill in the House, and no funding authorization amount specified in the bill summary provided. Authorization bills set policy direction but do not allocate actual money — separate appropriations legislation is required for any funding. The mechanism is a grant program administered by USDA NIFA, which would fund research on practices like soil carbon sequestration, cover cropping, and nitrogen management. This is a permissive authorization, not mandatory: the bill states USDA 'may' award grants, subject to appropriations. For private sector companies, the link to revenue is indirect and distant: publicly funded research could validate the agronomic benefits of climate-smart practices, which over years could influence product adoption (biologicals for Corteva; precision equipment for Deere). No direct contract, tax credit, or procurement benefit exists in the bill. Historically, similar research grant authorizations (e.g., the Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018) have a low probability of enactment in their standalone form, especially with a single Democratic sponsor and only 4 cosponsors in a divided 119th Congress. The legislative path is long and uncertain: committee markup, floor passage in Senate, House introduction and passage, conference committee, and a Presidential signature — and this bill only authorizes, never appropriates. Investors should not trade on this bill in isolation.
Key Legislators
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
Proclamation: Further Adjusting the Tariff Regimes for Imports of Aluminum, Steel, and Copper into the United States
PALANTIR TECHNOLOGIES INC.: $94.7M Department of Agriculture Contract
H.R. 1 — Budget Reconciliation Act (One Big Beautiful Bill)
A resolution expressing support for the designation of May 2026 as "Renewable Fuels Month" to recognize the important role that renewable fuels play in lowering fuel prices for consumers, lessening reliance on foreign adversaries, supporting rural communities, and reducing carbon impacts.
Wildlife Health Coordination and Zoonotic Disease Prevention Act of 2026
Nationwide Consumer and Fuel Retailer Choice Act of 2025
DOD and USDA Interagency Research Act
GLRI Act of 2025
Related Presidential Actions
Executive orders & memoranda affecting the same sectors or companies
Further Adjusting the Tariff Regimes for Imports of Aluminum, Steel, and Copper into the United States
This proclamation modifies existing Section 232 tariffs on aluminum, steel, and copper imports by expanding the list of derivative products eligible for a reduced 15% duty to include agricultural equipment and residential HVAC systems, temporarily reducing tariffs on mobile industrial equipment, adding aluminum lithographic plates and steel racks to the derivative tariff coverage, and lowering the threshold for products to qualify as made 'entirely' from American metals from 95% to 85%.