billS4688Event Thursday, June 4, 2026Analyzed

A bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to classify qualified energy-efficient draft alcohol property as 15-year property for purposes of depreciation.

Neutral

Summary

S4688 proposes reclassifying qualified energy-efficient draft alcohol property as 15-year property for depreciation under the Internal Revenue Code. The bill is in early legislative stages with no direct market impact yet.

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Key Takeaways

  • 1.S4688 is an early-stage bill with no direct market impact yet.
  • 2.The bill offers a tax depreciation benefit for energy-efficient draft alcohol property, potentially aiding ethanol producers.
  • 3.No funding is authorized; the mechanism is a tax code change.

Market Implications

No immediate market implications. The bill is procedural and unlikely to move markets until it advances through committee. Investors should watch for cosponsor additions and committee hearings as indicators of legislative traction.

Full Analysis

  1. On June 4, 2026, Senator Sheehy (R-MT) introduced S4688, a bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code to classify qualified energy-efficient draft alcohol property as 15-year property for depreciation purposes. The bill was read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance, indicating an early stage in the legislative process. 2) The bill does not authorize or appropriate any funding; it modifies tax depreciation treatment. The mechanism is a tax incentive: accelerated depreciation (15-year MACRS) for capital investments in energy-efficient draft alcohol property, which likely includes equipment used in the production of ethanol or other alcohol-based fuels. No specific dollar amount is attached. 3) Potential beneficiaries include companies involved in ethanol production and renewable fuel infrastructure, such as $ADM, $GPRE, $REX, $PEIX, and $ANDE. However, the bill is too early-stage to determine if it will advance, and the tax benefit is modest relative to overall capital costs. 4) No real market data is provided for these tickers. The competitive landscape for ethanol producers is influenced by RFS mandates, blending economics, and corn prices, not solely by depreciation rules. 5) The bill must pass the Senate Finance Committee, the full Senate, the House, and be signed by the President. Given the early stage and single sponsor, the timeline is uncertain and likely extends beyond the current Congress.

Key Legislators

Sen. Sheehy, Tim [R-MT]

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