billS795Event Thursday, February 27, 2025Analyzed

Farmers Freedom Act of 2025

Neutral

Summary

The Farmers Freedom Act of 2025 (S795) is an early-stage bill excluding prior converted cropland from Clean Water Act Section 404 permit requirements. Referred to committee with zero floor action, the bill has a long legislative path and no appropriations. Current stock prices for $DE, $AGCO, $MOS, and $CF reflect broader macro trends (7-day: $AGCO +1.55%, $DE, $MOS, $CF were in a 7-day downtrend per your prompt), not this bill, which has no near-term market impact.

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Key Takeaways

  • 1.S795 provides a regulatory exemption for prior converted cropland from Clean Water Act 404 permits — it authorizes zero spending and has no appropriation component.
  • 2.The bill is early-stage, stuck in committee for 14 months with no floor action, no House companion, and no bipartisan support — near-zero probability of enactment in the 119th Congress.
  • 3.No publicly traded company has material revenue exposure to this regulatory change; tickers $DE, $AGCO, $MOS, and $CF are affected at a de minimis level below 0.2 confidence.

Market Implications

There are no actionable market implications for retail investors from S795 at this stage. The bill has no funding, no spending authority, and no near-term path to passage. Current equity prices for , , , and are driven by macro factors including commodity prices, interest rates, and global agricultural demand, not by this dormant legislative proposal. The bill does not create a catalyst for any of these names. The correct investor action is to ignore this bill until and unless it passes committee mark-up, which is unlikely given the current Congress's remaining timeline. No positioning is warranted based on this event.

Full Analysis

  1. WHAT HAPPENED AND CURRENT STATUS: On February 27, 2025, Senator Rounds (R-SD) introduced S795, the Farmers Freedom Act of 2025, which would amend the Clean Water Act to exclude 'prior converted cropland' (land drained or manipulated for agriculture before December 23, 1985) from the definition of 'navigable waters,' thereby exempting it from Section 404 permit requirements for dredged or fill material discharges. The bill was read twice and referred to the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works. As of the analysis date (April 30, 2026), the bill has had no additional floor action, no hearings scheduled, no markups, and no companion bill in the House. The bill remains in early-stage committee referral with six cosponsors (all Republicans) and no Democratic support, indicating a partisan, low-priority legislative vehicle.

  2. THE MONEY TRAIL: This bill authorizes zero spending. It is a regulatory exemption, not an appropriation or authorization of funds. There is no dollar amount attached to the bill, no grant program, no tax credit, and no contract authority. The economic effect is purely a reduction in compliance costs for a subset of agricultural landowners who currently must obtain Section 404 permits for activities on prior converted cropland. The Congressional Budget Office would likely score this as having no direct spending impact and only potential minor changes to federal administrative costs (EPA/USACE permit processing workload).

  3. STRUCTURAL WINNERS AND LOSERS: The bill's passage would marginally benefit row-crop farmers with pre-1985 drained fields by reducing regulatory uncertainty and permitting costs. For publicly traded agricultural companies, the link is tenuous. Deere and AGCO sell equipment used in drainage maintenance and land leveling, but these product lines represent a small fraction of their total revenue. Mosaic and CF Industries sell fertilizer to all farmers, not specifically those affected by this bill. No pure-play company exists whose primary revenue stream depends on Clean Water Act Section 404 permitting for prior converted cropland. The bill does not create, eliminate, or redirect any government spending program.

  4. MARKET DATA ANALYSIS: Per the provided Yahoo Finance data for $AGCO: current price $117.94, 52-week range $89.80-$143.78. The 7-day change is +1.55% (from $116.13 on 4/24 to $117.93 on 4/30). The 30-day change is +1.78%. Recent daily closes show a V-shaped pattern: prices fell from $118.60 (4/17) to a low of $114.43 (4/29), then bounced to $117.93 on 4/30. This intra-week volatility is consistent with macro factors (grain futures, interest rates, input costs) and has no connection to S795, which was introduced 14 months prior and has not advanced. Your prompt stated that , , , and show a 7-day downtrend, but the provided data shows a +1.55% 7-day gain. No market reaction to S795 exists because the bill has no market-moving provisions.

  5. TIMELINE: The bill has been stalled in committee for 14 months. To become law, it must: (a) pass the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee mark-up, (b) pass the full Senate, (c) pass the House (no companion bill exists), (d) reconcile differences, and (e) be signed by the President. Given the 119th Congress is past its midpoint (began Jan 2025, ends Jan 2027), the legislative window for this bill is narrowing. The bill has no cosponsors from the House, no committee chair sponsorship (Senator Carper, D-DE, chairs EPW), and no bipartisan support. Passage probability is low in the current Congress.

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