$PHM is a publicly traded company in the Infrastructure sector. This company operates across Infrastructure and is subject to various Congressional legislative and regulatory actions. HillSignal is tracking 18 active Congressional signals mentioning $PHM, including 18 bills. The current legislative sentiment is predominantly bullish, suggesting potential tailwinds from government policy.
The Freedom to Build Act (S.4265) is a voluntary, incentive-based bill at the earliest legislative stage with no authorized funding and no mandate. It offers a competitive designation to localities that adopt reforms reducing regulatory barriers to modern construction methods, but carries no near-term market impact. No tickers, sectors, or causal chains meet the confidence threshold.
S.4241, the Boosting Housing Supply through Small Businesses Act of 2026, is an early-stage procedural bill requiring interagency coordination between the SBA and HUD. No funding is authorized or appropriated, and the bill remains in committee with minimal legislative momentum. There is no direct market impact for public homebuilders at this stage.
HR8221, the First-Time Homebuyer Savings Act, is an early-stage bill creating a tax-advantaged savings account for first-time homebuyers with zero direct spending. Referred to the House Ways and Means Committee on April 9, 2026, with a long legislative path ahead. No near-term market impact for any publicly traded company.
HR8171 (FAST Housing Act) is an early-stage authorization bill with zero appropriated funding, creating a small demonstration program of up to 15 competitive grants for workforce housing. The bill signals federal policy support for zoning reform and housing construction, contributing to the 30-day homebuilder rally of +2.7% to +12.1% across $LEN, $DHI, $PHM, $KBH, and $TOL, though recent 7-day pullbacks of 3-5% indicate near-term uncertainty and lack of concrete funding.
The Housing Tariff Exclusion Act (S. 3943) directs Commerce to establish a process eliminating tariffs on imported homebuilding inputs where domestic supply falls short. This directly reduces input costs for homebuilders ($DHI, $LEN, $PHM, $TOL) and material suppliers ($MAS, $OC). The sector has already rallied strongly on expectation — $MAS +18.93% and $OC +14.27% in 30 days — but the bill is early in the legislative process (referred to Finance Committee) with significant procedural uncertainty ahead.
The Housing Affordability Act (S.1527) proposes a 4-5x increase in FHA multifamily loan limits with construction-specific inflation indexing, creating a structural tailwind for homebuilders and multifamily lenders if passed. The bill is at early committee stage, but homebuilder stocks (DHI, MTH, LEN) have rallied 3-12% over the last 30 days reflecting sector momentum. Passage requires full committee markup, floor votes, and companion bill progress (HR6132).
The Modular Housing Production Act (S.2489) is a pure procedural study bill — it commissions a HUD review of FHA financing barriers for modular homes but authorizes zero funding, creates no regulatory changes, and has no near-term market impact. Homebuilder stocks are structurally unaffected. This is a legislative placeholder with no investment actionability.
The Revitalize Our Neighborhoods Act (HR6217) is an early-stage bill authorizing HUD competitive grants for blight elimination and neighborhood revitalization. It has zero funded dollars, is stuck in committee since November 2025, and presents no near-term market catalyst for homebuilders ($LEN, $DHI, $PHM) or retailers ($HD, $LOW). Real market data shows all five tickers have declined 2-4% in the past week, consistent with sector headwinds, not legislative activity.
HR 7216 (MAHA Act) proposes a $5,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers but is in early committee stage with zero momentum. No market impact is expected near-term. Real market data shows homebuilders (LEN, DHI, PHM, KBH) down sharply over the past 7 days (-3.4% to -4.5%) despite a 30-day uptrend, driven by macro factors unrelated to this stalled bill.
HR7503 is a minor eligibility expansion for the Good Neighbor Next Door program with zero new funding. The program's annual volume of ~2,000 units is negligible against total US home sales. No market-moving data exists and no publicly traded companies are materially affected.
The Affordable Housing Bond Enhancement Act (S1511) would expand mortgage revenue bond programs, lowering financing costs for first-time and moderate-income homebuyers. Entry-level homebuilders ($DHI, $LEN, $PHM, $KBH) are structurally positioned to benefit from increased buyer demand, while major bond underwriters ($BAC, $JPM, $WFC) could see modest fee increases from higher issuance volumes. The bill is early-stage (post-hearing in Senate Banking Committee, companion in House Ways and Means) with no appropriations — it changes tax code provisions, not direct spending.
HR4576 (Build More Housing Near Transit Act) is an early-stage bill offering a procedural incentive for local transit-oriented upzoning, with zero authorized spending. The bill creates a structural long-term tailwind for homebuilders and aggregates producers near transit corridors, but with only 14 cosponsors and a referral to subcommittee, it is years from any market impact. Current stock prices for builders and materials firms show mixed trends over the past month, with materials holding better than homebuilders in the trailing week.
HR7402 (Unlocking Homeownership Act) is a two-month-old, single-sponsor bill in the earliest legislative stage with zero committee action. It has no market impact today and an extremely low probability of passage. No actionable investment thesis exists.
HR6644 (21st Century ROAD to Housing Act) expands FHA multifamily loan limits and broadens HOME program eligibility, directly benefiting homebuilders (DHI, LEN, PHM, KBH, TOL) and mortgage originators (WFC, JPM, BAC, USB). The bill passed the House 50-1 and awaits Senate action. Real market data shows homebuilders with mixed 30-day trends and a recent 7-day pullback, while bank stocks rose sharply over the past week, suggesting market anticipation of housing policy tailwinds.
The Affordable Housing Credit Improvement Act of 2025 (S.1515) is early-stage legislation that would expand the LIHTC program, the primary federal subsidy for affordable rental housing. If enacted, it directly benefits major homebuilders with multifamily divisions ($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.
The Neighborhood Homes Investment Act (S.1686) introduces a federal tax credit under Sec. 42A of the Internal Revenue Code to bridge the value gap in distressed-community housing construction. For homebuilders like $DHI, $PHM, and $LEN, this directly improves unit economics on affordable product. For banks like $JPM, $BAC, and $USB, it expands the addressable lending pool and creates a new tax-credit syndication revenue stream. The bill is early-stage (referred to Finance Committee), so the market is not yet pricing this catalyst.
The More Homes on the Market Act is an early-stage Senate bill (S. 3332) that would double the capital gains exclusion on primary residence sales to $500,000 for individuals and $1,000,000 for married couples, with inflation indexing. Filed December 3, 2025, the bill has been referred to the Senate Finance Committee and has not advanced. The limited legislative momentum means near-zero near-term market impact despite the structural benefit to homebuilders and mortgage banks if passed.
The National Housing Emergency Act of 2026 (S.3600) has been introduced by Sen. Slotkin (D-MI) and referred to the Senate Banking Committee — an early-stage bill with zero funding authorized. It would require the President to declare a national housing emergency and invoke Defense Production Act authorities for residential construction materials, but no appropriations, mandatory spending, or binding procurement directives exist yet. Market impact is procedural: this bill signals legislative interest in supply-side housing policy but lacks the legislative momentum or funding mechanism to move any sector measurably.