billS4781Event Monday, June 15, 2026Analyzed

Make More in America Act of 2026

Neutral

Summary

Sen. Schumer's Make More in America Act of 2026 (S4781) was introduced and referred to committee on June 15, 2026, in the 119th Congress. The bill is in the earliest legislative stage with no committee markup or fiscal details released. No specific funding authorization, regulatory mandate, or identifiable money trail can be derived from the current text and action history.

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Key Takeaways

  • 1.S4781 is a procedural bill with zero authorized funding and no regulatory mandate.
  • 2.No public company revenue or cost structure is affected by this action.
  • 3.The bill must clear committee and pass both chambers before any market signal emerges.

Market Implications

No market implications from this action. The bill is in committee referral stage with no sector-specific policy or funding authorization. Retail investors should not adjust positions based on this introduction.

Full Analysis

On June 15, 2026, Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY) introduced S4781, the Make More in America Act of 2026. The bill was read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, where it remains. This is the sole action to date. The bill text (CR S2786-2791) was published with Sen. Schumer's introductory remarks. As a newly introduced, committee-referred bill, there is no authorized funding amount, no appropriations linkage, and no specific regulatory mechanism yet described that would affect any public company's revenue or cost structure. The bill has 12 cosponsors but no companion bill in the House. The Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs oversees financial regulation, housing finance, and international trade, which suggests the bill may involve domestic manufacturing incentives or reshoring provisions, but no details are available. Without concrete policy language or fiscal estimates, assigning tickers or causal financial chains would be speculative and violate analytical grounding rules. The legislative path ahead includes committee hearings, markup, potential amendments, and floor votes in both chambers before any Presidential action. There is no convergence with other procurement actions or presidential directives in the provided data. At this stage, the bill carries no near-term market impact.

Key Legislators

Sen. Schumer, Charles E. [D-NY]

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