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Citigroup ($C)

NYSE/NASDAQ: C

Company & Legislative Profile

Citigroup is a publicly traded company in the Finance sector. As a financial institution, this company is subject to Congressional banking regulation, capital requirement changes, and consumer protection legislation that directly impact operating margins. HillSignal is tracking 12 active Congressional signals mentioning Citigroup, including 12 bills. The current legislative sentiment leans bearish, with regulatory or policy headwinds potentially affecting performance.

Citigroup ($C) is currently facing 12 active congressional signals tracked by HillSignal. With 3 bullish, 3 neutral, and 6 bearish signals, covering 5 sectors. Key sectors affected include Finance, Technology and Consumer. Recent major catalysts include Bankruptcy Threshold Adjustment Act of 2026 and Main Street Capital Access Act. Below is the complete tracker of government activity affecting Citigroup’s market performance.

12

Total Signals

Active

Action Status

3

Bullish Signals

6

Bearish Signals

Recent Congressional Signals for Citigroup ($C)

HR8087 (Main Street Depositor Protection Act) proposes raising FDIC insurance on noninterest-bearing transaction accounts to up to $5M, but remains in early procedural status with no funding mechanism. The bill reduces tail-risk of deposit flight for money-center banks but creates a contingent liability on the Deposit Insurance Fund. Real market data shows all six tracked bank stocks trading near the upper end of their 52-week ranges with positive 30-day momentum (2.89-13.55% gains), reflecting market pricing of a stable operating environment with low near-term legislative disruption risk.

HR8087Congressional Bill

HR 7622 expands Iran sanctions without new appropriations, increasing compliance costs for financial institutions and payment networks. The bill is in early committee stage with 58 cosponsors and moderate passage probability. For retail investors, the primary market effect is a structural cost increase for money-center banks and payment processors with cross-border exposure, but the scale is modest relative to overall revenue and the legislative path remains uncertain.

HR7622Congressional Bill

The Bankruptcy Threshold Adjustment Act of 2026, reported out of committee and awaiting floor action, doubles the debt limits for consumer Chapter 13 and small business Chapter 11 filings. This directly expands credit loss severities for U.S. consumer lenders. Capital One ($COF), Synchrony ($SYF), and Ally Financial ($ALLY) face earnings headwinds of 8–30% from higher charge-off rates. Citigroup ($C) faces moderate incremental losses. The 30-day uptrend in lender stocks risks reversal as the bill's passage probability increases.

HR7730Congressional Bill

HR6955 (Main Street Capital Access Act) passed out of the House Financial Services Committee on 2026-04-20 and is now on the Union Calendar. This is the most significant banking deregulation bill of the 119th Congress. It reduces capital requirements, streamlines merger reviews, modernizes the discount window, and promotes de novo bank formation. Large banks, community banks, and fintech lenders all benefit structurally. Market has already priced in initial momentum with broad banking gains over the last 30 days.

HR6955Congressional Bill

The Billionaires Income Tax Act (HR 5427) is an early-stage House bill proposing annual mark-to-market taxation of unrealized capital gains for billionaires. Real market data shows alternative asset managers Blackstone and Carlyle trading at $122.51 and $48.94 respectively after 7-day declines of 0.71% and 1.28%, with Carlyle down 6.94% over the past week. BlackRock at $1056.19 bucked the trend with a 7-day gain of 1.07%, reflecting its status as a potential beneficiary of capital rotation from illiquid to liquid assets. The bill remains stuck in committee with 32 cosponsors and no hearings — low probability of passage in the 119th Congress, but the market is already pricing structural risk.

HR5427Congressional Bill

HR7887 is a single-sponsor early-stage bill referred to committee with no legislative momentum. It would prohibit stock sales by senior executives at large banks only if the bank receives a poor regulatory rating. The bill has zero market impact today. All six major bank stocks traded within normal ranges in April 2026 with no event-driven volatility tied to this legislation.

HR7887Congressional Bill

HR7866 is an early-stage bill that would allow states to opt out of federal interest rate preemption for loans made by banks chartered in other states. This increases the regulatory burden on large national banks like JPMorgan, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and Citigroup by fragmenting the national lending market across potentially 50 state regimes. The bill is currently in committee with a companion bill in the Senate, but its early stage limits near-term market impact.

HR7866Congressional Bill

HR7886 (Failed Bank Executives Accountability and Consequences Act) is an early-stage bill expanding FDIC clawback authority over executive compensation for negligence causing bank losses. It increases long-term regulatory risk for all large bank holding companies but has zero near-term revenue impact. Major bank stocks showed mixed 7-day performance as of April 30, 2026, ranging from WFC +2.63% to GS -1.29%, reflecting broader market forces rather than this bill's legislative progress.

HR7886Congressional Bill

The SSI Savings Penalty Elimination Act (HR2540) proposes to raise asset limits for 8 million low-income Americans from $2,000 to $10,000 (individuals), indexed to inflation. This creates a structural inflow of low-cost deposits to US retail banks as previously unbanked SSI recipients gain incentive to use formal banking. The bill is early-stage (referred to Ways and Means, April 2025) with 31 cosponsors — bipartisan but faces a long legislative path. Immediate market impact is low, but if enacted, major consumer banks like JPMorgan, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo would benefit from deposit growth with near-zero marginal cost.

HR2540Congressional Bill

The Affordable Housing Credit Improvement Act of 2025 (S.1515) is early-stage legislation that would expand the LIHTC program, the primary federal subsidy for affordable rental housing. If enacted, it directly benefits major homebuilders with multifamily divisions ($LEN, $DHI, $PHM, $KBH, $TOL) by increasing the supply of development capital. Major bank tax equity investors ($JPM, $WFC, $BAC, $C) also benefit from expanded syndication volume.

S1515Congressional Bill

The Climate Change Financial Risk Act of 2025 (HR2823) would impose mandatory biennial climate risk capital evaluations and resolution plans on large U.S. banks. This creates direct compliance costs for JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan Stanley, while generating demand for consulting and IT services from Accenture and IBM. The bill is in early legislative stages with a companion bill in the Senate, but has low near-term passage probability given partisan dynamics and its early committee referral status.

HR2823Congressional Bill

The Merger Process Review Act (HR6546) mandates triennial Inspector General reviews of how federal prudential regulators handle bank merger applications, but does not alter approval standards, timelines, or outcomes. This is a procedural transparency bill with zero direct impact on bank revenues, costs, or M&A activity. Bank stocks continue trading on unrelated macro and earnings factors.

HR6546Congressional Bill

Understanding These Signals

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