HR8591, the No Capital Gains Tax on Family Farms Act, was introduced and referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means on April 30, 2026. At this early stage with no committee action, hearings, or markup, the bill has no near-term market impact. No specific companies or sectors are materially affected until legislative progress occurs.
TICKER INTELLIGENCE
Archer-Daniels-Midland ($ADM)
NYSE/NASDAQ: ADM
Company & Legislative Profile
Archer-Daniels-Midland is a publicly traded company in the Agriculture sector. This company operates across Agriculture and is subject to various Congressional legislative and regulatory actions. HillSignal is tracking 21 active Congressional signals mentioning Archer-Daniels-Midland, including 20 bills and 1 federal contract. The current legislative sentiment is predominantly bullish, suggesting potential tailwinds from government policy.
Archer-Daniels-Midland ($ADM) is currently facing 21 active congressional signals and 1 federal contract tracked by HillSignal. With 5 bullish, 16 neutral, and 0 bearish signals, covering 8 sectors. Key sectors affected include Agriculture, Energy and Manufacturing. Recent major catalysts include H.R. 1 — Budget Reconciliation Act (One Big Beautiful Bill) and Nationwide Consumer and Fuel Retailer Choice Act of 2025. Below is the complete tracker of government activity affecting Archer-Daniels-Midland’s market performance.
21
Total Signals
Monitored
Action Status
5
Bullish Signals
0
Bearish Signals
Recent Congressional Signals for Archer-Daniels-Midland ($ADM)
HR 8646 is a procedural step in the annual agriculture appropriations process for FY2027. The reported bill text provides standard funding levels for USDA agencies and farm programs, but contains no major policy changes or spending shocks. Market impact is negligible — tickers ADM, BG, DE face no revenue or margin changes from this bill's current state.
HR 1346 (Nationwide Consumer and Fuel Retailer Choice Act) passed the House on April 29, 2026 via a closed rule. The bill amends the Clean Air Act to allow year-round sale of E15 gasoline by extending the RVP waiver from E10 to E15. This removes a major seasonal regulatory barrier for ethanol producers, expanding the addressable market for ethanol-blended fuels by an estimated 500-800 million gallons annually. The bill now moves to the Senate where companion bill S.593 has been introduced.
This $11.9M contract to ALL-AMERICAN FARMS INC for fresh tomatoes supports USG food donations, representing a routine procurement for agricultural commodities with limited direct impact on publicly traded entities, though it benefits the broader agricultural supply chain.
HR8374 is a structural policy bill introduced in the House that would remove statutory references to 'socially disadvantaged farmers and ranchers' from federal agriculture programs. The bill is in early legislative stages (referred to committee) with no clear path to passage, and no funding authorization or appropriation is involved. Direct market impact is negligible.
HR7567 (Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026) passed the House Agriculture Committee 34-17 and is on the Union Calendar for floor debate. The bill reauthorizes USDA commodity, conservation, trade, and nutrition programs through FY2031. No specific dollar amounts are authorized in the bill text, but structural policy stability for 5 years removes downside risk for agribusiness equipment and input suppliers. Deere ($DE) at $590, ADM ($ADM) at $75.53, and CF Industries ($CF) at $125.08 are clear beneficiaries of maintained planted acreage. Mosaic ($MOS) at $23.52 faces headwinds from fertilizer price compression but benefits from volume stability.
HR8137 introduces a $0.10/lb tax credit for domestic production of renewable materials from biomass. ADM, a major producer of biobased chemicals from corn and soy in the U.S., is positioned to be a direct beneficiary. The stock has rallied 8.58% in the past 7 days to $75.17, nearing its 52-week high of $75.47, with the bill's introduction on March 27 as a likely catalyst.
HR 7807 is an early-stage procedural bill authorizing a claims commission for U.S. persons with expropriated property in Honduras. It allocates no funding and has no market impact on any publicly traded company. Recent moves in $KO, $PEP, $ADM, $XOM, $CVX are driven by earnings and commodity prices, not this legislation.
Checkoff Transparency Act
NEUTRALThe Checkoff Transparency Act (HR7851) is a procedural transparency bill requiring USDA to publish existing audit and budget documents for commodity checkoff programs. It alters no market mechanisms, no revenue streams, and no funding for any publicly traded company. No market impact is expected.
HR5186 authorizes a DoD bioindustrial manufacturing program for defense supply chain resilience. No direct appropriation — this is a pipeline-creating authorization that positions synthetic biology ($DNA), agricultural processing ($ADM), and specialty materials ($DD) firms for future contract awards. The bill is in early legislative stage (referred to committee), but the companion NDAA FY2026 (S1071) has already become law, creating a clear legislative pathway for defense biomanufacturing funding in subsequent appropriations.
Senate Resolution 203 is a purely symbolic, non-binding resolution designating May 2025 as 'Renewable Fuels Month.' It authorizes no spending, enacts no new laws, and changes no regulations. Market impact is zero for all affected sectors and companies.
Farm and Family Relief Act
NEUTRALThe Farm and Family Relief Act (HR7206) is an early-stage, unfunded bill that would provide one-time payments to commodity producers for the 2025 crop year and delay SNAP benefit reductions to 2032. No funding is authorized or appropriated; the bill has been referred to three committees with no further action since January 2026. Market data for $ADM and $BG shows these stocks near 52-week highs with strong recent momentum, but this is driven by factors other than this stalled legislation.
HR5111 is an early-stage procedural bill modifying CRP haying/grazing rules and adding a continuous enrollment practice. It authorizes zero new funding and remains in House subcommittee. Market impact on agriculture-sector tickers is negligible — $ADM, $CTVA, and $DE see no revenue effect based on the legislative text and status.
HR7589 expands existing USDA grant program eligibility to meat and poultry processors but carries no funding. The bill is in early legislative stages. Tyson Foods ($TSN) is the most directly affected publicly traded company, though any revenue impact is speculative and contingent on future appropriations.
H.R. 1 signed into law July 4, 2025, with agricultural and defense titles that structurally benefit ADM via stabilized commodity pricing and GD via authorized shipbuilding growth. However, 10 months post-enactment, market price action for both stocks (ADM +7.89% 7-day to $74.69; GD +9.59% 7-day to $343.24) is detached from this legislation, indicating other factors dominate.
Reclaim Trade Powers Act
NEUTRALThe Reclaim Trade Powers Act (HR2459) has been introduced in the House and referred to the Ways and Means Committee. It would repeal the President's authority to impose temporary tariffs of up to 15% to address balance-of-payments deficits. At this early procedural stage with zero markup or Senate action, there is no direct, measurable market impact.
HR5710 suspends payment limits and authorizes advance partial payments for ARC/PLC programs for crop year 2025. The bill is in early legislative stages with no further action since referral to the House Agriculture Committee in October 2025. No market-moving impact is expected in the near term.
S. 525 is a purely procedural bill transferring administrative functions for the Food for Peace Act from USAID to USDA. It authorizes no new funding, changes no program scope, and directly affects no public company revenue streams. The bill has advanced no further than committee referral since introduction 14 months ago, indicating negligible near-term market relevance.
CROP Act
BULLISHThe CROP Act (S.3297) proposes a temporary, retroactive reinstatement of the $1.00/gallon biodiesel tax credit through May 31, 2026. The bill sits in early legislative stage — introduced in the Senate with a single sponsor and referred to Finance Committee. No companion bill exists in the House. Passage probability is low in current form. If enacted, the credit directly improves margins for biodiesel producers and their feedstock suppliers.
HR7716 (Tariff Free Farming Act) is an early-stage bill blocking new tariffs on imported agricultural inputs from normal trade relations countries. At referral stage with low near-term passage probability, its market impact is procedural. Fertilizer importers $NTR and downstream processors $ADM see a marginal bullish effect, while domestic producers $MOS and $CF lose a potential tariff-driven pricing tailwind.
Specialty CROP Act of 2026
NEUTRALThe Specialty CROP Act of 2026 (S. 3915) is an early-stage procedural bill that mandates a new annual USDA report on foreign trade barriers for specialty crops. It authorizes zero funding, imposes no obligations on any private company, and has no material financial impact on any public company or sector.
Understanding These Signals
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