To amend subtitle B of title IV of the McKinney-Vento Homelessness Assistance Act to establish supplemental severe weather emergency solutions grants, and for other purposes.
Summary
HR9303 is an early-stage bill referred to committee with no dollar amount, no additional sponsors, and no appropriation. There is no verifiable financial impact on any public company at this stage.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.HR9303 is at the earliest legislative stage — referred to committee with no funding specified.
- 2.No public company has a calculable revenue impact from this bill at this time.
- 3.No tickers cleared the 0.65 confidence gate; inclusion would require fabricated causal chains.
Market Implications
No market implications exist at this stage. The bill has not been marked up, amended, or paired with any appropriation, and affects no public company revenue stream. This is a procedural event only.
Full Analysis
On June 11, 2026, Representative Thanedar introduced HR9303 in the 119th Congress. The bill was referred to the House Committee on Financial Services on the same day. The legislative process is at its earliest point: only one sponsor, one referral, and zero committee hearings or markups. No funding amount is specified in the bill title or action history. Authorization-to-appropriation risk is total at this stage — even if the committee acts, any eventual grants would require a separate appropriations bill. The single sponsor is a junior member (Rep. Thanedar, D-MI-13) without committee leadership, further lowering legislative momentum. No companion bill has been introduced in the Senate. No measurable revenue path exists for any publicly traded company. The bill's mechanism — supplemental severe weather emergency solutions grants for homelessness assistance — is structurally remote from any public company's revenue stream. Even if enacted, grant recipients would be state and local governments, not for-profit entities. No ticker meets the confidence threshold of 0.65 because the causal distance from this preliminary action to any company-specific financial impact is multiple layers of appropriations and administrative discretion.
Key Legislators
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
Executive Order: Restoring Integrity to America’s Financial System
Proclamation: National Homeownership Month, 2026
Ensuring Better Interest Treatment and Deductibility Act (EBITDA)
8-K: Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta — Obligation Acceleration
Presidential Memorandum: 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
Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025
Executive Order: Integrating Financial Technology Innovation into Regulatory Frameworks
Community Bank Regulatory Tailoring Act
Related Presidential Actions
Executive orders & memoranda affecting the same sectors or companies
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.
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.
Removing Unnecessary and Counterproductive Restrictions on Access to Federal Lands
This executive order rescinds two 1970s-era executive orders (11644 and 11989) that required federal agencies to use vague environmental and social criteria when designating off-road vehicle use on federal lands. It directs the Secretaries of War, Interior, Agriculture, the TVA Board, and other relevant agency heads to initiate rulemakings to remove or revise regulations based on those criteria, aiming to increase access for energy, timber, utility maintenance, and recreation.