Small Business Investor Capital Access Act
Summary
S.3880 is a procedural bill that modestly raises the private fund adviser registration threshold from $150M to $175M AUM. It has no authorized funding, no tax changes, and no sector-level revenue impact. The bill remains in committee with only one cosponsor and low legislative odds in the 119th Congress. For large publicly traded asset managers like Blackstone ($BX) and KKR ($KKR), which operate far above the threshold, this bill is procedurally irrelevant.
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.S.3880 is a minor regulatory threshold adjustment with zero dollar authorization or tax impact.
- 2.Large publicly traded asset managers (BX, KKR) operate far above the $175M threshold and are procedurally unaffected.
- 3.The bill has low legislative odds: one cosponsor, early committee stage, no markups scheduled.
- 4.No tickers meet the causal chain gate criteria for inclusion in this analysis.
Market Implications
No market implications for any publicly traded company. $BX and $KKR have not moved on this news, and their recent price declines (approximately 6% and 3% respectively over the last two weeks) are attributable to broader market conditions, not legislative action. $CBOE is unaffected. This bill does not alter competitive dynamics, revenue streams, or cost structures for any publicly traded entity. Retail investors should disregard this bill entirely.
Full Analysis
Intelligence Surface
Cross-referenced against federal contracts, SEC insider filings & congressional trade disclosures
Some confirming evidence found across public data sources
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
Incentivizing New Ventures and Economic Strength Through Capital Formation Act of 2025
Increasing Investor Opportunities Act
HOPE (Humans over Private Equity) for Homeownership Act
Tackling Predatory Litigation Funding Act
Litigation Funding Transparency Act of 2026
Financial Stability Oversight Council Improvement Act of 2025
Billionaires Income Tax Act
To prohibit a State to impose a retroactive tax on assets of nonresident individuals.
Related Presidential Actions
Executive orders & memoranda affecting the same sectors or companies
Imposing Sanctions on Those Responsible for Repression in Cuba and for Threats to United States National Security and Foreign Policy
This Executive Order expands the existing national emergency against the Government of Cuba by imposing broad secondary sanctions and asset freezes on foreign persons operating in key sectors of the Cuban economy (energy, defense, metals/mining, financial services, security). It authorizes the Treasury and State Departments to block property and deny entry to individuals and entities involved in repression, corruption, or support for the Cuban government, and empowers Treasury to sanction foreign financial institutions that facilitate transactions for designated persons. The order effectively tightens the U.S. embargo by targeting third-country companies and banks that do business with Cuba.
Promoting Retirement-Savings Access for American Workers by Establishing TrumpIRA.gov
This executive order directs the Treasury Secretary to create a government website (TrumpIRA.gov) by January 1, 2027, that lists private-sector IRAs meeting strict cost and quality criteria (net expense ratios ≤0.15%, no minimums) and promotes the existing federal Saver's Match of up to $1,000. It aims to increase retirement savings access for workers without employer plans, particularly independent contractors and self-employed individuals, by steering them toward low-cost, index-based investment options offered by qualifying financial institutions.
Presidential Determination Pursuant to Section 303 of the Defense Production Act of 1950, as Amended, on Development, Manufacturing, and Deployment of Large-Scale Energy and Energy‑Related Infrastructure
This presidential memorandum invokes Section 303 of the Defense Production Act (DPA) to accelerate the development, manufacturing, and deployment of large-scale energy and energy-related infrastructure. It authorizes the Secretary of Energy to make necessary purchases, commitments, and financial instruments to expand domestic capabilities in this sector, citing a national energy emergency and the need to avert an industrial resource shortfall.