billHR9335Event Thursday, June 18, 2026Analyzed

Advanced Transmission Technology to Reduce Rates Act

Neutral

Summary

HR9335 has been referred to the House Energy and Commerce Committee. No text, funding authorization, or specific policies are available. It is an early-stage procedural action with no near-term market impact on any public company.

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.No actionable market signal from a bill that has only been referred to committee.
  • 2.Investors should monitor Energy and Commerce Committee schedules for hearings or a released bill text.
  • 3.No tickers can be assigned because no causal chain from bill to company can be established.

Market Implications

No market implications at this stage. Once text is published and a committee markup is scheduled, grid technology vendors like $GEV (GE Vernova) or transmission planning consultants could become relevant, but no data supports that yet.

Full Analysis

Representative Goldman introduced HR9335 on 2026-06-18, and the bill was referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce. The title suggests advanced transmission technology to reduce rates, but no bill text has been released or analyzed. Without specific policy mechanisms — such as cost allocation changes, technology mandates, or funding authorizations — there is no identifiable money trail or obligated party. The legislative path for an early-stage bill in a committee requires hearings, markups, and potentially a floor vote before any Senate action. Given the absence of detail, no tickers can be reliably tied to this legislation. All analysis stands at neutral and low impact until substantive language emerges.

Key Legislators

Rep. Goldman, Craig A. [R-TX-12]

Related Presidential Actions

Executive orders & memoranda affecting the same sectors or companies

presidential_memorandumJun 12, 2026

National Security Presidential Memorandum/NSPM-12

This memorandum rescinds previous national security directives and re-establishes the Committee on National Security Systems (CNSS) to enforce baseline cybersecurity standards across all National Security Systems (NSS) operated by the Department of War, Intelligence Community, and Federal Civilian Executive Branch agencies. It creates binding directives and complementary standards that must meet or exceed NIST guidelines, empowers the NSA Director as the National Manager to issue emergency directives and cryptography requirements, and holds agency heads accountable through government-wide oversight.

presidential_memorandumJun 5, 2026

National Security Presidential Memorandum/NSPM-11

This memorandum directs the national security enterprise (including the Department of War, intelligence agencies, and others) to accelerate the adoption, adaptation, and assurance of AI technologies for military and intelligence missions. It mandates updates to DOD Directive 3000.09 on autonomous weapons within 90 days, requires termination of contracts with companies that repeatedly violate policy (e.g., by enabling adversary control or embedding bias), and emphasizes supply chain resilience and multi-vendor sourcing to avoid single-vendor dependencies.

Exec OrderJun 3, 2026

Strengthening Customs Enforcement

This executive order directs the Secretary of Homeland Security to revise customs enforcement regulations within 180 days, requiring importers of record (IORs) to maintain minimum tangible domestic assets or bonding, disclose ownership and business affiliations, and maintain good standing with CBP. It prohibits foreign IORs from filing informal entries for low-value articles and imposes additional bonding and CTPAT validation requirements for foreign IORs on formal entries, aiming to enhance compliance and revenue collection.