A concurrent resolution setting forth the congressional budget for the United States Government for fiscal year 2026 and setting forth the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 2027 through 2035.
Summary
SCONRES33 is a congressional budget resolution that sets overall revenue and spending levels for FY2026-2035 and provides reconciliation instructions. It does not directly authorize or appropriate funds for any specific program, company, or sector. The resolution has passed the Senate but awaits House action, and no direct linkage to energy producers or other companies can be made from the bill text alone.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.SCONRES33 is a procedural budget resolution; it does not directly affect any company's revenue or costs.
- 2.No energy-specific policies are included in the bill text; reconciliation instructions are blank at this stage.
- 3.The resolution has cleared the Senate but faces an uncertain path in the House.
Market Implications
The resolution's passage in the Senate is a procedural step with no direct market impact. Energy tickers showed mixed 30-day changes (XOM +1.32%, CVX +1.52%, HAL -2.52%, SLB -0.51%, KMI +1.01%, ET -1.46%) that align with normal sector volatility. Without specific policy language enacted, no actionable trading thesis exists.
Full Analysis
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What happened: SCONRES33 is a concurrent resolution on the budget for FY2026-2035. It was submitted by Senator Graham (R-SC) on April 21, 2026, referred to the Budget Committee, discharged, and passed the Senate on April 23 by a 50-48 vote. It now awaits action in the House. The resolution recommends federal revenue and spending levels for the ten-year period but does not contain any programmatic spending authorizations or tax changes — it is a procedural framework.
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Money trail: The resolution sets recommended levels for revenues ($4.24T in FY2026), outlays, deficits, and debt. It includes reconciliation instructions that would allow deficit-financed legislation, but those instructions direct committees to draft subsequent bills. No money is directly controlled or obligated by this resolution. Budget resolutions are not appropriations and do not authorize contracts, grants, or tax credits.
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Structural winners and losers: Because the resolution itself is procedural, no companies are directly impacted. Reconciliation instructions could eventually lead to energy tax/spending policies, but the text of SCONRES33 does not specify which policies. The enrichment data references five DPA determinations on April 20, but those are separate executive actions, not part of this bill. No causal chain can be drawn from this resolution to any specific ticker.
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Real market data: For the energy tickers mentioned in the enrichment data, the provided real market data shows mixed price action over the last 30 days: XOM +1.32%, CVX +1.52%, KMI +1.01%, ET -1.46%, SLB -0.51%, HAL -2.52%. These movements are within normal volatility and cannot be attributed to this resolution, which has not been enacted.
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Timeline: The resolution has passed the Senate. The House must pass an identical version for it to take effect. No House action has occurred yet. Even after passage, reconciliation instructions require separate legislation to be drafted, marked up, and passed — a process that typically takes months.
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
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