To prohibit a person from making a misleading recycled content claim in advertising, marketing, selling, or offering for sale a product to a consumer, and for other purposes.
Summary
HR7502 proposes a federal standard prohibiting misleading recycled content claims in consumer product marketing. The bill is in early committee stage with 9 cosponsors and limited legislative momentum. For $PG, $KO, $PEP, $KMB, and $CL, the bill imposes added compliance costs with no revenue offset — structurally bearish but low probability of passage in current form.
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.HR7502 imposes compliance costs on consumer goods manufacturers with no revenue offset — structurally bearish for companies with recycled content marketing.
- 2.The bill has only 9 cosponsors and has seen no action since being referred to committee two months ago — low probability of passage in the 119th Congress.
- 3.Market prices do not reflect HR7502 risk; current stock movements are driven by company-specific fundamentals and broader market factors, not this legislation.
Market Implications
HR7502 presents a low-probability, low-magnitude bearish risk for PG, KO, PEP, KMB, and CL. At current stock prices — PG $147.17, KO $78.76, PEP $158.44, KMB $97.31, CL $85.38 — the market is correctly discounting this risk due to the bill's early legislative stage. However, if the bill gains committee traction (e.g., a markup is scheduled, a Senate companion is introduced), expect relative underperformance in these names as compliance costs are priced in. No upside beneficiaries exist since the bill creates no new market or revenue stream.
Full Analysis
Intelligence Surface
Cross-referenced against federal contracts, SEC insider filings & congressional trade disclosures
Multiple independent sources confirm this signal’s market thesis
What the bill does
Federal prohibition on misleading recycled content claims in advertising, marketing, and product labeling; creates a uniform compliance standard with associated legal and operational costs.
Who must act
Procter & Gamble (consumer packaged goods manufacturer) — must ensure all products sold in the US comply with new federal recycled content claim standards.
What happens
Increased compliance costs for legal review, packaging redesign, supply chain documentation, and potential liability risk for non-compliant claims; no revenue offset or new market creation.
Stock impact
PG sells billions of units across laundry, paper, personal care, and home care categories (Tide, Charmin, Pampers, etc.) where recycled content claims are prevalent; bill imposes direct cost burden on every SKU with a recycled claim with zero revenue upside.
What the bill does
Federal prohibition on misleading recycled content claims in advertising, marketing, and product labeling; creates a uniform compliance standard with associated legal and operational costs.
Who must act
Coca-Cola Company (beverage manufacturer) — must ensure all packaging claims about recycled content in bottles/cans comply with new federal standard.
What happens
Increased compliance costs for packaging documentation, legal certification, and potential liability; Coca-Cola has publicly marketed recycled PET content goals — bill raises the legal bar for substantiating these claims.
Stock impact
KO's packaging is central to its brand and sustainability messaging; bill forces costly substantiation of recycled content across global supply chains for US market products, with no revenue offset.
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
To amend the Federal Trade Commission Act to include requirements for recyclable, compostable, and reusable claims for packaging for a consumer product, and for other purposes.
Growing and Preserving Innovation in America Act of 2025
No Tax Breaks for Outsourcing Act
Dietary Guidelines Reform Act of 2025
Childhood Diabetes Reduction Act of 2025
Expanding Child Care Access Act of 2025
Defending Domestic Orange Juice Production Act of 2025
Baby Changing in Health Centers Act
Related Presidential Actions
Executive orders & memoranda affecting the same sectors or companies
To Implement Certain Provisions in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2026, and for Other Purposes
This proclamation implements provisions of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2026, extending duty-free treatment under the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) through December 31, 2026, including the regional apparel article program and third-country fabric program. It also redesignates Gabon as a beneficiary sub-Saharan African country effective January 1, 2026, and extends preferential tariff treatment for Haiti under the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act (CBERA) through December 31, 2026, with updated percentage limits for apparel imports. The proclamation directs modifications to the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS) and authorizes agencies to implement these changes.
Restoring Integrity to America’s Financial System
This executive order directs the Treasury Department to issue an advisory to financial institutions on risks from non-work authorized populations and their employers, propose regulatory changes to strengthen Bank Secrecy Act customer due diligence and identification requirements, and consider risks from foreign consular IDs. It also directs the CFPB to clarify that deportation risk can affect ability-to-repay assessments for non-work authorized borrowers, and federal financial regulators to issue guidance on credit risks from this population.
Peace Officers Memorial Day and Police Week, 2026
This proclamation designates May 15, 2026, as Peace Officers Memorial Day and May 10-16, 2026, as Police Week, calling for ceremonies and flag-lowering. It highlights prior executive actions including the Working Families Tax Cuts Act (no tax on overtime for police) and an Executive Order ending cashless bail in the federal system, which may influence state-level policies and law enforcement spending.