billHR9232Event Tuesday, June 9, 2026Analyzed

To grant authority to use counter-unmanned aircraft system technologies to private owners of critical infrastructure facilities, and for other purposes.

Neutral

Summary

HR9232 is an early-stage bill that would authorize private owners of critical infrastructure to use counter-UAS technologies. It has been referred to three committees with no further action, and no funding is authorized. No specific company or ticker can be reliably linked at this stage.

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Key Takeaways

  • 1.HR9232 is in the earliest legislative stage with no funding authorized.
  • 2.No specific companies or tickers can be reliably linked to this bill at this time.
  • 3.Investors should monitor committee activity and any future appropriations language.

Market Implications

The bill is too early-stage to drive market movements. If it advances, potential beneficiaries could include counter-UAS technology providers such as $Dedrone (private), $Fortem Technologies (private), or public defense primes with UAS divisions like $RTX or $LMT, but no public company is directly named or funded. The lack of appropriation means no revenue impact is estimable. Investors should treat this as a monitoring event only.

Full Analysis

On June 9, 2026, Representative Matt Van Epps (R-TN-7) introduced HR9232, a bill to grant authority to private owners of critical infrastructure facilities to use counter-unmanned aircraft system (counter-UAS) technologies. The bill was referred to the Committees on Transportation and Infrastructure, Judiciary, and Homeland Security. As of June 10, 2026, the bill is in the earliest legislative stage with no hearings, markups, or companion legislation. The bill does not authorize any specific funding amount; it is purely an authorization to use existing technologies. Without appropriation or a clear procurement mandate, the direct market impact is negligible. The legislative path requires committee consideration in three separate committees, floor votes in both chambers, and presidential action—a process that typically takes months to years. No real market data or historical precedent for this specific bill exists. The sponsor is a junior member (first term), further reducing near-term momentum. Given the procedural stage and lack of funding, no tickers meet the confidence threshold for inclusion.

Key Legislators

Rep. Van Epps, Matt [R-TN-7]

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