Proportional Reviews for Broadband Deployment Act
Summary
HR2289 (Proportional Reviews for Broadband Deployment Act) passed House Energy and Commerce 26-24 and advances to a floor vote. The bill exempts routine tower modifications from NEPA/NHPA reviews, directly benefiting tower REITs ($AMT, $CCI, $SBAC) and carriers ($TMUS, $VZ, $T) through faster permitting and lower soft costs. The three tower REITs are collectively up 1-8% over the last 30 days entering the House floor window, with $SBAC leading at +27.95%.
See which stocks are affected
Key takeaways, market implications, full AI analysis, and connected signals are available to HillSignal members.
Already have an account? Log in
Key Takeaways
- 1.HR2289 exempts routine wireless tower modifications from NEPA and NHPA environmental reviews—purely deregulatory, no new funding authorized.
- 2.Tower REITs ($AMT, $CCI, $SBAC) are primary beneficiaries: faster carrier leasing velocity, lower soft costs per collocation, improved ROIC on existing tower assets.
- 3.Carrier $TMUS benefits most among carriers due to mid-band 5G spectrum position and rural broadband ambitions; $VZ and $T also benefit materially.
- 4.The bill cleared House Energy and Commerce 26-24 and awaits floor action—moderate passage probability; no Senate companion exists.
- 5.All six tickers showed positive 7-day price momentum entering the floor vote window; $SBAC up 27.95% over 30 days.
Market Implications
As of April 30, 2026: $AMT at $181.37 (7D +1.77%), $CCI at $87.85 (7D +1.75%), $SBAC at $220.22 (7D +0.34%). These three tower REITs are entering a potential House floor vote catalyst with positive short-term momentum. $SBAC's 30-day performance (+27.95%) is an outlier—investors should evaluate whether this includes anticipation of the bill or other company-specific factors. Carrier tickers $TMUS ($196.56), $VZ ($47.88), and $T ($26.24) have underperformed over the last 30 days (-6.41%, -4.62%, -9.49% respectively) but show 7-day recovery patterns. The primary risk to the bull case is Senate inaction—the narrow party-line committee vote signals the bill faces Democratic opposition on NHPA grounds. Investors should monitor (1) House floor scheduling, (2) introduction of a Senate companion bill, and (3) the Senate Commerce Committee's position on NHPA federal preemption of tribal consultation rights.
Full Analysis
-
WHAT HAPPENED AND STATUS: On April 15, 2026, HR2289 (Proportional Reviews for Broadband Deployment Act) was reported out of the House Energy and Commerce Committee on a party-line 26-24 vote. The bill is now on the Union Calendar (Calendar No. 532) awaiting a House floor vote. Introduced March 24, 2025 by Rep. Buddy Carter (R-GA), the bill has 14 cosponsors and has been through subcommittee mark-up (Nov 2025, 16-12) and full committee mark-up (Dec 2025, 26-24). The bill amends Section 6409(a)(3) of the Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012. Passage probability is moderate given the thin committee margin—floor passage depends on Republican whip count, and the Senate path is unclear with no companion bill introduced.
-
THE MONEY TRAIL — THIS IS A REGULATORY RELIEF BILL, NOT A FUNDING BILL: No federal funding is authorized or appropriated. The value created is purely from regulatory cost reduction. The current regulatory process for routine tower modifications (adding antennas, replacing radios) on existing structures can trigger NEPA environmental assessments (3-12 months, $50K-$200K+ per assessment) and NHPA Section 106 historic preservation reviews (2-6 months, $20K-$100K per review). For an industry deploying hundreds of thousands of modifications under the 5G build, these soft costs accumulate to an estimated $50-$150M+ annually across all carriers and tower operators. This bill eliminates those costs for routine modifications only—new tower builds and greenfield sites remain subject to full NEPA/NHPA review.
-
STRUCTURAL WINNERS AND LOSERS: The three tower REITs—$AMT (American Tower, $181.37), $CCI (Crown Castle, $87.85), $SBAC (SBA Communications, $220.22)—are direct structural beneficiaries. These companies generate revenue by leasing tower space to carriers; faster carrier leasing velocity and lower tenant improvement costs directly improve NOI per tower and ROIC. Among carriers, $TMUS (T-Mobile, $196.56) is the largest beneficiary given its mid-band spectrum position (2.5 GHz n41, 600 MHz) and rural broadband expansion strategy. $VZ (Verizon, $47.88) and $T (AT&T, $26.24) benefit from accelerated C-band and FirstNet densification respectively. Losers are limited to environmental consulting firms and tribal/historic preservation contractors who currently perform these reviews—these are not publicly traded pure-plays.
-
REAL MARKET TRENDS: As of April 30, 2026, the tower REITs have shown positive 7-day momentum: $AMT +1.77%, $CCI +1.75%, $SBAC +0.34%. The 30-day picture is mixed: $SBAC is a standout at +27.95% (likely driven by factors beyond this bill given the bill has been pending since Dec 2025), while $AMT is +5.09% and $CCI +8.04%. Carriers show divergent 30-day trends: $TMUS -6.41%, $VZ -4.62%, $T -9.49%, though all three had a strong 7-day recovery week (+3.56%, +3.23%, and +0.15% respectively). The positive week for all six tickers coincides with the April 15 committee report publication and Union Calendar placement—the market is contracting on the floor vote catalyst.
-
TIMELINE: The next step is House floor consideration. No date has been scheduled. If passed, the bill would then go to the Senate where no companion bill currently exists. The 119th Congress runs through January 2027. Given the narrow committee vote (26-24) and partisan split, the bill's probability of full enactment is moderate—floor passage in the Republican-controlled House is likely, but Senate passage requires 60 votes and faces uncertain support from Senate Democrats who may oppose the NHPA exemption on tribal/historic preservation grounds.
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
Exemption from NEPA and NHPA review requirements for routine modifications of existing wireless towers and base stations (eligible facilities requests).
Who must act
American Tower Corporation (landlord/operator of wireless tower sites) and all entities seeking to collocate, remove, or replace transmission equipment on existing structures.
What happens
Eliminates the need for federal environmental and historic preservation reviews (typically 3-12 months per application) on routine tower modifications, reducing permitting soft costs by an estimated 30-50% per modification and accelerating deployment timelines by months.
Stock impact
AMT's core business is leasing tower space to carriers. Faster permitting directly accelerates tenant additions (collocations) and equipment upgrades, increasing future rental revenue per tower. Lower regulatory risk improves return on invested capital for tower portfolio expansions, particularly for mid-band 5G densification where existing towers are the primary deployment vector.
What the bill does
Exemption from NEPA and NHPA review requirements for routine modifications of existing wireless towers and base stations (eligible facilities requests).
Who must act
Crown Castle Inc. (landlord/operator of wireless tower and small cell sites) and all entities seeking to modify existing communications structures.
What happens
Removes multi-month federal environmental/historic review delays for routine collocations and equipment swaps, reducing regulatory lag that currently slows Crown Castle's ability to onboard new carrier tenants and upgrade existing sites.
Stock impact
CCI has the largest U.S. tower portfolio among pure-play REITs (~40,000 towers + 100,000+ small cells). The bill directly benefits its tower leasing revenue stream (65% of revenue) by lowering the friction cost of carrier densification. Faster permitting cycles improve Crown Castle's ability to convert its small cell backlog into recognized revenue. The exemption covers both towers and the base stations to which small cells attach.
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
Related Presidential Actions
Executive orders & memoranda affecting the same sectors or companies
Promoting Advanced Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Security
This executive order directs multiple federal agencies to prioritize cybersecurity hardening of national security, Department of War, and civilian government systems within 30 days. It establishes a classified benchmarking process for 'covered frontier models' and a voluntary framework for AI developers to provide early access to such models to the government for cybersecurity purposes. It also creates an AI cybersecurity clearinghouse, expands cybersecurity hiring pathways, and directs enforcement against AI-enabled computer crimes.
Further Adjusting the Tariff Regimes for Imports of Aluminum, Steel, and Copper into the United States
This proclamation modifies existing Section 232 tariffs on aluminum, steel, and copper imports by expanding the list of derivative products eligible for a reduced 15% duty to include agricultural equipment and residential HVAC systems, temporarily reducing tariffs on mobile industrial equipment, adding aluminum lithographic plates and steel racks to the derivative tariff coverage, and lowering the threshold for products to qualify as made 'entirely' from American metals from 95% to 85%.
Approving Critical Position Pay Authority for National Security Investment Workforce
This memorandum authorizes the Office of Personnel Management to allocate up to 400 critical positions with pay up to $400,000 to recruit specialized talent for national security investment programs, focusing on critical minerals, advanced materials, and strategic supply chains. It directs OPM and OMB to oversee allocation and ensure pay is used only to recruit or retain exceptionally qualified individuals. The action aims to accelerate domestic mineral production and reduce foreign dependence.