billS1773Event Thursday, May 15, 2025Analyzed

Tax Relief for Victims of Crimes, Scams, and Disasters Act

Neutral

Summary

S.1773 is an early-stage bill that would reinstate the personal casualty loss deduction retroactively to 2018. It has been referred to the Senate Finance Committee with only 5 cosponsors and no committee action. Intuit ($INTU) shows a 30-day decline of -7.91% driven by broader market factors, not this bill, which poses negligible near-term market impact.

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.1773 is an early-stage bill with low legislative momentum (5 cosponsors, both chambers in committee)
  • 2.No direct government spending — only a retroactive tax deduction reinstatement
  • 3.Marginal potential upside for tax preparation software ($INTU) but insufficient to drive current price trends
  • 4.$INTU's 30-day decline of -7.91% is unrelated to this legislation

Market Implications

The bill has no measurable impact on $INTU's current valuation or market trajectory. Intuit's recent price action — a decline from ~$408 on Apr 22 to $395 on Apr 29 — reflects broader sector dynamics (likely earnings sentiment, macroeconomic concerns, or sector rotation) rather than legislative catalysts. Even if S.1773 were to advance, the revenue impact on tax preparation firms would be modest relative to Intuit's overall revenue base (~$16B annually). Investors should not base any position on this bill at this stage.

Full Analysis

What happened: S.1773, the 'Tax Relief for Victims of Crimes, Scams, and Disasters Act,' was introduced in the Senate on May 15, 2025, by Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-WI). It is now referred to the Senate Committee on Finance. The bill would strike Section 165(h)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code, reinstating the personal casualty loss deduction that was suspended by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (2017) effective for taxable years after 2017. A companion bill (H.R. 3469) exists in the House but is also in early referral.

The money trail: This bill does not authorize or appropriate any direct government spending. It is a tax expenditure — a reduction in federal revenue from allowing deductions. The Joint Committee on Taxation would estimate the revenue loss, but no estimate is available at this early stage. Actual taxpayer impact depends on filing claims for refunds for past years and future deductions.

Winners and losers: The direct beneficiary is the tax preparation software industry, particularly Intuit, as the complexity of personal casualty loss calculations (including salvage value, insurance reimbursement, and AGI floors) increases the value proposition of guided tax software. However, this effect is marginal. Broader tax advisory firms (H&R Block, $HRB) could also see modest demand. No companies face a direct negative revenue impact.

Real data: currently trades at $395.08, near the low end of its 52-week range of $342.11 to $813.70. The 7-day change is +3.07% (from $383.30 on Apr 23), but the 30-day change is -7.91%. This price action is consistent with broader tech/sector trends, not legislative news about S.1773.

Timeline: The bill is in the earliest legislative stage. It must pass the Senate Finance Committee, the full Senate, the House Ways and Means Committee, the full House, and be signed by the President. With a divided Congress and a narrow cosponsor base (5 senators, all Democrats), passage in the current session is uncertain and would require significant bipartisan support or inclusion in a larger tax extenders package.

Related Presidential Actions

Executive orders & memoranda affecting the same sectors or companies

proclamationJun 12, 2026

National Homeownership Month, 2026

This proclamation formalizes National Homeownership Month and details several ongoing or proposed policy actions: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are directed to purchase $200 billion in mortgage-backed securities to lower borrowing costs; an executive order bans large institutional investors from buying single-family homes; and the Administration calls on Congress to pass the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act to make these reforms permanent. The action also reaffirms efforts to restrict taxpayer-backed loans to only law-abiding citizens, targeting fraud and illegal immigration as a means to improve housing affordability.

Exec OrderJun 3, 2026

Implementing Schedule Policy/Career in the Excepted Service

This executive order expands the Schedule Policy/Career excepted service category, transferring certain federal positions from competitive service to at-will employment to facilitate removal for poor performance or misconduct. It directs agency heads to petition for reclassification of policy-influencing roles, mandates performance bonus pools for these employees, and amends civil service rules to exempt them from standard adverse action procedures.

Exec OrderMay 19, 2026

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.

Free — no credit card

Get the next market-moving signal before the news does

HillSignal scores every Congressional bill, federal contract, and insider filing for market impact and emails you the high-conviction ones — free, no credit card.

Weekly digest — the congressional activity that actually moved markets that week, in plain English. Free, one email.

Free forever plan · No credit card · Unsubscribe in one click

Want the live terminal too? Create a free account →