Flood Insurance for Farmers Act of 2025
Summary
HR5961 (Flood Insurance for Farmers Act) is an early-stage bill expanding NFIP eligibility for agricultural structures via local variances. It authorizes zero dollars — it changes regulatory standards, not funding. Near-term market impact is negligible for insurance carriers TRV, ALL, and CB because the bill is stalled in committee with only 4 cosponsors. Real market data shows all three tickers are near their 52-week highs with recent price declines of 1-3% in the past week, reflecting broader market rotation, not legislative activity.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.HR5961 is early-stage, stalled in committee since November 2025 — no legislative momentum.
- 2.Bill authorizes $0 in spending — it changes flood insurance eligibility rules, not funding appropriations.
- 3.Near-term market impact is negligible; insurance tickers TRV, ALL, CB are all trading down 1-3% in the past week from broader market factors.
- 4.If passed long-term, WYO carriers would see modest fee revenue from servicing additional NFIP agricultural policies.
Market Implications
No material market implications from HR5961 in the near term. The three relevant insurance tickers (TRV at $302.25, ALL at $212.33, CB at $325.75) are all within 3-5% of their respective 52-week highs, with 7-day declines of 1.65%, 1.95%, and 2.14% respectively — consistent with a risk-off rotation, not a legislative catalyst. The structural upside for these companies from this bill is low because it affects a niche subset (agricultural structures in SFHAs) within a program (NFIP) where these carriers earn fee income, not underwriting profit. Investors should not trade these tickers based on HR5961.
Full Analysis
Intelligence Surface
Cross-referenced against federal contracts, SEC insider filings & congressional trade disclosures
No confirming evidence found yet from contracts, insider trades, or congressional activity
What the bill does
Regulatory variance — allows local zoning authorities to grant variances from floodproofing/elevation requirements for agricultural structures in Special Flood Hazard Zones (SFHAs), increasing insurability of structures currently excluded.
Who must act
NFIP-participating communities (counties/municipalities with agricultural land) and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA/Administrator). Communities may adopt variance criteria; FEMA must not suspend communities for allowing variances.
What happens
Expansion of addressable NFIP policy count for agricultural structures currently not eligible due to construction standards. Each new variance-eligible structure becomes a potential NFIP policy, which Write-Your-Own (WYO) insurers service. Volume increase proportional to number of qualifying farm structures in SFHAs.
Stock impact
TRV is a top WYO carrier under the NFIP program. Each new policy yields fee-based service income with no underwriting risk (government assumes flood loss). More policies = higher servicing fee revenue. However, this is an early-stage bill (referred to committee); no revenue yet.
What the bill does
Regulatory variance — same mechanism: variance for agricultural structures from floodproofing/elevation requirements in SFHAs expands NFIP eligibility pool.
Who must act
NFIP-participating communities and FEMA (same as above).
What happens
Expanded pool of insurable agricultural structures increases total NFIP policy count, serviced by WYO carriers including ALL. Policy volume upside from currently excluded farm buildings.
Stock impact
ALL is also a major WYO carrier servicing NFIP policies. Additional policies generate fee-based revenue. Materiality is low because the agricultural structure subset of total NFIP policies is small. Bill is early-stage.
Market Impact Score
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
TRIA Program Reauthorization Act of 2026
Protecting America's Property Rights Act
To ensure that Write Your Own companies can sell private flood insurance products that compete with National Flood Insurance Program products.
A bill to ensure that Write Your Own companies can sell private flood insurance products that compete with National Flood Insurance Program products.
Doug LaMalfa Federal Disaster Tax Relief Certainty Act
Insurance Data Protection Act
Water Infrastructure Subcontractor and Taxpayer Protection Act of 2025
Commission on Natural Disaster Risk Management and Insurance Act
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