HR 8600 is an early-stage bill referred to the House Ways and Means Committee on April 30, 2026. It proposes a conditional fuel excise tax reduction tied to gasoline prices above $3.99/gallon, offset by suspending certain oil and gas tax deductions (intangible drilling costs). The bill has zero near-term market impact as it has not passed committee, let alone either chamber.
TICKER INTELLIGENCE
Chevron ($CVX)
NYSE/NASDAQ: CVX
Company & Legislative Profile
Chevron is a publicly traded company in the Energy sector. This company's operations and valuation are directly affected by Congressional energy policy, including renewable energy credits, fossil fuel regulations, and grid infrastructure spending. HillSignal is tracking 29 active Congressional signals mentioning Chevron, including 28 bills and 1 federal contract. The current legislative sentiment is predominantly bullish, suggesting potential tailwinds from government policy.
Chevron ($CVX) is currently facing 29 active congressional signals and 1 federal contract tracked by HillSignal. With 17 bullish, 6 neutral, and 6 bearish signals, covering 11 sectors. Key sectors affected include Energy, Transportation and Infrastructure. Recent major catalysts include KIEWIT INFRASTRUCTURE WEST CO.: $218M Department of the Interior Contract and New Source Review Permitting Improvement Act. Below is the complete tracker of government activity affecting Chevron’s market performance.
29
Total Signals
Monitored
Action Status
17
Bullish Signals
6
Bearish Signals
Related Sectors
Recent Congressional Signals for Chevron ($CVX)
H.Con.Res.75 is a non-binding resolution directing the President to withdraw U.S. forces from Iran hostilities. Active bipartisan debate and unanimous-consent floor management indicate strong legislative momentum, even though it carries no funding. Defense contractors face risk from a potential end to hostilities, which would defer an estimated $1-5B in munitions replenishment; energy majors see removal of a $3-5/bbl geopolitical risk premium. However, the resolution remains non-binding and allows defensive operations, limiting direct enforceability and thus confidence in any causal chain linking it to specific company revenue.
HR7688 (DPA Modernization Act) reduces regulatory risk for domestic energy producers by limiting presidential DPA emergency powers, combined with a concurrent Presidential Determination supporting petroleum and refining. Energy stocks XOM, CVX, PSX, MPC rose 4-10% in the 7 days after the 41-0 committee vote on March 4 and the Presidential Determination, while defense primes LMT, NOC, GD, RTX continue significant 30-day declines of 7-17% unrelated to this bill.
SCONRES33 is a congressional budget resolution that sets overall revenue and spending levels for FY2026-2035 and provides reconciliation instructions. It does not directly authorize or appropriate funds for any specific program, company, or sector. The resolution has passed the Senate but awaits House action, and no direct linkage to energy producers or other companies can be made from the bill text alone.
HR8330, introduced April 16, 2026 and referred to the House Judiciary Committee, proposes a broad liability exemption for all energy companies across the full hydrocarbon value chain. The market has already been accumulating energy equities over the past 7 trading sessions, with refiners MPC (+9.97%) and PSX (+8.79%) leading sector gains, suggesting institutional recognition of this pro-energy regulatory trajectory. Combined with the April 20 DPA determinations and recent presidential permits for Enbridge, the administration is building a comprehensive policy floor for energy infrastructure investment.
HR 6116 is an early-stage House bill mandating groundwater testing near fracking operations. It has no Senate companion, zero appropriation, and near-zero passage probability in this Congress. Market data shows HAL, SLB, XOM, and CVX are all trading near or at their 52-week highs, with no event-driven impact from this procedural legislation.
HR8079 eliminates ALL federal emissions control requirements for motor vehicles — a complete repeal of Title II Clean Air Act rules on aftertreatment, diagnostic systems, and diesel fuel sulfur. The bill structurally destroys demand for aftertreatment component suppliers like Dana ($DAN) while drastically lowering cost bases for truck manufacturers (PACCAR) and refiners (ExxonMobil, Chevron, Phillips 66, Marathon Petroleum). This is early-stage legislation with zero earmarked funding, but its mechanism — absolute prohibition on enforcement — is a direct financial transfer from the emissions control supply chain to truck OEMs and fuel producers.
American Petroleum First Act
BULLISHThe American Petroleum First Act (HR8021), introduced March 19, 2026, exempts certain vessels from Jones Act restrictions for domestic crude and petroleum product transport, lowering marine costs for refiners and producers. Real market data shows a strong 7-day recovery in energy stocks, led by independent refiners MPC (+9.52%), PSX (+8.42%), and VLO (+6.48%), reversing sharp 30-day pullbacks in majors (XOM -8.7%, CVX -6.65%). Bill is early-stage but represents a clear regulatory catalyst for domestic oil logistics cost relief.
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.
HR1555 eliminates federal drilling permits and NEPA reviews for oil/gas wells on non-federal surface where the U.S. owns less than 50% of the subsurface minerals. This directly benefits the four major Permian Basin operators—ExxonMobil, Chevron, EOG Resources, and Occidental Petroleum—by cutting 30-90 days of regulatory delay per well and lowering compliance costs. The bill is currently in subcommittee markup in the 119th Congress, with active legislative momentum and bipartisan executive support through the recent DPA energy memoranda.
HR7882 would open federal mineral acreage inside Carlsbad, New Mexico city limits for leasing, expanding drillable inventory in the core of the Permian Basin. The bill is in early House committee stage with subcommittee hearings completed. Major Permian operators OXY, EOG, XOM, and CVX are structural beneficiaries of increased federal lease availability in the Delaware Basin. Real market data shows all four tickers up 3.8-5.0% over the past 7 days, recovering from 30-day declines of 3.5-8.9%.
This $218M contract for wastewater treatment facility rehabilitation in Yosemite National Park is a significant win for Kiewit Infrastructure West Co., a private entity, but directly benefits publicly traded infrastructure and utility companies in its supply chain. The award aligns with recent legislative efforts to bolster water infrastructure, suggesting a positive outlook for the sector.
The Big Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act (S4111) imposes a 50% excise tax on crude oil profits above a 2025 baseline, directly targeting U.S. producers (XOM, CVX, EOG, OXY) and refiners/importers (MPC, PSX, VLO). The bill is in early committee stage with 12 Democratic cosponsors and a companion in the House, indicating partisan momentum but a long legislative path. Despite recent 7-day rallies in oil stocks (XOM +3.7%, MPC +8.74%), the bill signals a clear policy risk to upstream margins and refining costs.
HR 2165, introduced in March 2025, removes EPA authority to mandate EV technology or limit ICE vehicle availability. The bill remains in early legislative stages with 11 cosponsors and is referred to committee, but it signals a clear regulatory agenda protecting traditional automotive and oil/gas value chains. Real market data shows Ford at $11.85 (down 4.28% in 7 days), GM at $77.67 (down 0.49%), and Stellantis at $7.21 (down 10.55%), while energy tickers XOM ($154.39, +3.68%), CVX ($192.41, +3.89%), KMI ($32.61, +2.74%), and ET ($19.95, +4.56%) have rallied in the same period.
Stop CARB Act of 2025
BULLISHThe Stop CARB Act of 2025, introduced on March 18, 2025, and referred to the House Energy and Commerce Committee, would eliminate California's federal waiver to set independent vehicle emissions standards. This is structurally bullish for legacy automakers GM and Ford and integrated oil majors ExxonMobil and Chevron, which face reduced compliance costs and preserved ICE demand. It is structurally bearish for pure-play EV makers Tesla, Rivian, and Lucid, which lose a key regulatory tailwind and credit revenue streams. The bill is in early legislative stages with only 6 cosponsors and a companion bill in the Senate.
S3879 would exempt spent petroleum catalyst from hazardous waste regulations, enabling US refiners to recover vanadium and other critical minerals at lower cost. The bill is early-stage but has a House companion. Marathon Petroleum, Exxon Mobil, and Chevron stand to benefit from reduced compliance costs and new vanadium revenue streams.
LASSO Act
NEUTRALThe LASSO Act (HR34) is an early-stage bill that redirects 10% of existing federal lands and OCS revenue to Social Security without changing lease terms, royalty rates, or operator costs. It has zero direct financial impact on energy companies. The bill is in subcommittee with no floor vote scheduled — procedural noise for markets.
FREEDOM Act
NEUTRALThe FREEDOM Act (HR7329) is an early-stage House bill with no Senate companion, zero authorized funding, and six committee referrals — legislative conditions indicating extremely low near-term passage probability. Real market data confirms no causal link between this bill and recent stock moves: XOM and CVX rebounded +3.9% over 7 days on macro and earnings momentum after severe 30-day declines, while FCX fell -6.16% due to copper price pressure, not legislative sentiment. Retail investors should treat this as a procedural filing with no investable catalyst.
The No Climate Treaties Act (S.3713) is an early-stage Senate bill that would require a 67-vote supermajority for U.S. entry into any binding international climate agreement, including the Paris Agreement. For energy and coal companies, this structurally eliminates the primary legal pathway for economy-wide emissions caps or carbon pricing via treaty. Real market data shows energy stocks rebounding on the week (XOM +3.74%, CVX +3.59%), while BTU remains under 30-day pressure at $26.56. This bill, if advanced, removes a significant regulatory overhang for U.S. fossil fuel producers.
The Price Gouging Prevention Act of 2025 (HR4528) is an early-stage House bill capping corporate margins during 'exceptional market shocks'. Currently referred to committee with zero appropriations, the bill poses a structural long-term regulatory risk to all large-cap companies with pricing flexibility, particularly retailers ($WMT, $AMZN) and integrated energy ($XOM, $CVX). Near-term market impact is low given early legislative stage, but the bill's breadth — covering all goods and services — represents a significant expansion of FTC authority if it advances.
S.2427 is an early-stage Senate bill that would force federal energy and mining agencies to regularly sunset and rejustify regulations, imposing zero direct spending. Combined with the recent executive branch alignment via DPA determinations on April 20, 2026, the legislative-executive push is structurally bullish for upstream operators with significant federal acreage exposure. Real market data shows XOM, CVX, DVN, and OXY all posting strong 7-day gains of +3.22% to +5.47% as this regulatory relief narrative gains traction.
The No Tax Breaks for Outsourcing Act (S409) would eliminate tax deferral on foreign profits for U.S. multinationals, increasing effective tax rates by 5-8 percentage points. The bill is in early stages (referred to Senate Finance Committee, 19 cosponsors) and poses a 4-8% annual net income headwind for high international-exposure companies. Despite 8-30% rallies in the last 30 days across MSFT, AAPL, GOOGL, KO, PG, XOM, and CVX, this legislative risk is not currently priced into valuations.
S.J. Res. 118 failed to advance in the Senate on March 18, 2026 by a 47-53 vote, confirming no legislative mandate to withdraw U.S. forces from Iran. This maintains the current geopolitical risk premium: defense contractors and oil majors see no sudden removal of a key demand driver. Defense stocks ($LMT, $RTX, $NOC) have declined 9-16% in 30 days for reasons unrelated to this vote; energy stocks ($XOM, $CVX) are rebounding 3.4-3.5% in the last 7 days. This is a status-quo-preserving outcome that removes a legislative overhang.
S.4032 (Gas Prices Relief Act of 2026) proposes a federal gasoline excise tax holiday through October 1, 2026. The bill is in early legislative stages (referred to Senate Finance Committee) with companion bills in the House. For refiners and marketers ($XOM, $CVX, $MPC, $PSX, $VLO), the holiday is a pass-through cost reduction with mandatory consumer benefit — it does not change net earnings or competitive dynamics. Real market data through April 30, 2026 shows mixed 30-day performance but strong 7-day rallies across all five tickers, likely driven by broader energy sector dynamics rather than this stalled legislation.
Arctic Refuge Protection Act
BEARISHThe Arctic Refuge Protection Act (HR3067) is an early-stage bill in the 119th Congress that would repeal the ANWR oil and gas program. With 105 co-sponsors (all Democrats) but referred to the House Natural Resources Committee under a Republican-controlled House and a pro-domestic-production Presidential administration, the bill has essentially zero path to enactment. The market signal to major integrated oils XOM and CVX is negligible — the option value of ANWR was already heavily discounted given the long timeline, political risk, and competing Permian/offshore opportunities. Real price data shows XOM and CVX rallied +2.8% and +3.3% respectively over the past 7 days, consistent with broader energy sector strength, not reaction to this bill.
HR161 (New Source Review Permitting Improvement Act) reported out of House Energy & Commerce Committee on April 28, 2026. Refiners ($MPC, $PSX) and chemical companies ($LYB, $DOW) show strong 7-day gains of +9.37% and +8.75% respectively, reflecting market pricing of regulatory relief. The bill redefines NSR 'modification' to require a 10-year peak-hourly baseline and exempts reliability/safety projects, directly lowering compliance costs for heavy industry.
HR1422 (Enhanced Iran Sanctions Act) passed the House on March 16, 2026, and is now pending in the Senate. If enacted, mandatory sanctions on Iranian petroleum transactions will tighten global crude supply by 0.5-1.5 million bpd, boosting prices and margins for U.S. oil producers ($XOM, $CVX), independent refiners ($MPC, $PSX, $VLO), and crude tanker owners ($FRO, $DHT). Recent market data shows energy stocks already pricing in supply disruption risk, with refiners and tanker stocks posting strong 7-day gains of 2.7-9.4%.
CLEANER Act of 2025
BEARISHThe CLEANER Act (HR6080) proposes reclassifying oil/gas drilling wastes as hazardous, directly increasing operating costs for US E&P companies like $XOM, $CVX, and $EOG while creating a new revenue stream for waste management firms $WM and $RSG. The bill is in early committee stage with 23 Democratic cosponsors — low probability of passage in the 119th Congress given Republican control, but the fundamental mechanism creates clear winners and losers. Recent market action shows energy stocks recovering from 30-day losses: $XOM at $154.67 (up 2.75% 7-day), $CVX at $192.22 (+2.46%), $EOG at $139.12 (+3.92%) — but the regulatory overhang, if this bill advances, would reverse that trend for producers.
S. 109 mandates 20 Gulf of Mexico lease sales over 10 years, locking in a predictable offshore drilling schedule. The bill is in early legislative stages, reducing near-term probability, but its passage would structurally benefit pure-play Gulf operators like Occidental, Chevron, and ExxonMobil by removing regulatory uncertainty. Market data shows a broad 7-day energy sector bounce with OXY leading at +5.07%, but the 30-day trend remains deeply negative (-8.27% for OXY, -9.8% for XOM) indicating the sector is pricing in headwinds beyond this bill.
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