$ICE is a publicly traded company in the Finance sector. This company operates across Finance and is subject to various Congressional legislative and regulatory actions. HillSignal is tracking 7 active Congressional signals mentioning $ICE, including 7 bills. The current legislative sentiment is predominantly bullish, suggesting potential tailwinds from government policy.
AI-detected clusters of bills sharing policy language across their analyses. Concepts are literal phrases present in every member's AI text — not generated narratives.
The SILVER Act (HR8007) mandates geographic diversification of precious metals depositories beyond NYC, reducing storage costs and systemic risk. CME Group ($CME) and Intercontinental Exchange ($ICE) are the two US exchange operators structurally positioned to benefit as their clearing houses expand vault networks, driving higher futures trading volumes. At current prices ($CME $286.78, $ICE $158.91), both stocks have underperformed in the past month (-2.9% and +1.03% respectively), and this bill provides a sector-specific catalyst for precious metals volume growth with zero appropriations needed.
HR3383 — the Increasing Investor Opportunities Act — removes SEC restrictions on closed-end fund investments in private funds, directly benefiting private equity managers $BX and $KKR through expanded AUM channels, and exchange operators $CBOE, $ICE, and $NDAQ through increased listing and trading volume. The bill passed committee 41-10 and was considered under rule in December 2025; over the last 30 days, $BX gained +8.31% and $KKR +12.42%, consistent with growing passage expectations.
The Increasing Investor Opportunities Act (S.3671) removes SEC authority to restrict closed-end funds from investing in private funds and from listing those fund shares on exchanges. Private equity firms $BX and $KKR gain a new permanent capital source, while exchange operator $ICE (NYSE) directly benefits from increased listings. The bill is at an early stage (referred to committee), limiting near-term impact.
HR4130, the Small Business Relief Act, amends SEC registration thresholds to exclude qualified institutional buyers and institutional accredited investors from the shareholder count. This reduces the likelihood and urgency for private companies to go public, directly weighing on future listing revenue for exchange operators. The bill is actively progressing through the House with committee approval and a Union Calendar placement, but remains in early legislative stages.
HR7477 is an early-stage bill that would ban commodity exchanges from listing sports-event or casino-game contracts. It has zero near-term financial impact on any company because no such products currently exist or generate revenue at CME or ICE. For sportsbook operators DraftKings and PENN Entertainment, the bill removes a speculative competitive threat from regulated derivatives markets.
HR 7942 (DEATH BETS Act) would ban derivatives exchanges from listing contracts on war, assassination, terrorism, and death. For CME Group and ICE, this eliminates a nascent growth avenue for event-based products. However, the bill is early-stage, with zero revenue currently at risk from these unlaunched products. Market reaction in CME and ICE is muted and driven by broader sector trends.
HR7127 removes state-level blue-sky regulatory burdens on off-exchange secondary debt trading. The bill is on the House Union Calendar with committee approval, signaling active legislative momentum. $ICE and $CME are structurally positioned to benefit from reduced compliance costs and expanded trading volumes on their electronic fixed-income platforms.