
David J. Taylor
Price Movement Since Trade
How each stock has moved from the trade date to the most recent close.
Suspicious Timing Detected
5 flagsDavid J. Taylor bought $1,001 - $15,000 in $JPM on 2025-03-10, 31 days before the Federal Home Loan Banks' Mission Activities Act (S1439) was introduced, which could increase lending capacity for banks.
David J. Taylor bought $1,001 - $15,000 in $JPM on 2025-03-10, 51 days before the Housing Affordability Act (S1527) was introduced, which aims to boost the viability of new multifamily housing projects.
David J. Taylor bought $1,001 - $15,000 in $AMZN on 2025-03-27, 55 days before HR67, "Modernizing Retrospective Regulatory Review," which mandates federal agencies to adopt AI and data management, potentially benefiting tech companies.
These flags identify timing coincidences between stock trades and legislative activity. They do not imply wrongdoing. Click any bill number or ticker to see the full analysis.
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All Transactions
| Type | Ticker | Asset | Amount | Trade Price | Current | Change | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BUY | $AMZN | Amazon.com, Inc. - Common Stock (AMZN) | $1K-$15K | $201.36 | $263.99 | +31.1% | Mar 27, 2025 |
| BUY | $ETN | Eaton Corporation, PLC Ordinary Shares (ETN) | $1K-$15K | $277.61 | — | — | Mar 10, 2025 |
| BUY | $JPM | JP Morgan Chase & Co. Common Stock (JPM) | $1K-$15K | — | $308.28 | — | Mar 10, 2025 |
| BUY | $PH | Parker-Hannifin Corporation Common Stock (PH) | $1K-$15K | — | — | — | Mar 10, 2025 |
| SELL | $AEP | American Electric Power Company, Inc. (AEP) | $1K-$15K | $107.32 | — | — | Mar 10, 2025 |
| SELL | $T | AT&T Inc. (T) | $1K-$15K | $27.28 | — | — | Mar 10, 2025 |
Connected Legislative Activity
10 signalsThese bills and contracts share tickers or sectors with this filing's trades.
Restroom Access Act of 2025
HR3299 (Restroom Access Act) introduces a low-probability compliance mandate for retail establishments. Dollar stores ($DG, $DLTR) face the highest proportionally incremental costs due to thin staffing and margins, but the bill's early-stage status, single-party sponsorship, and no enacted status mean near-zero current market impact. Recent 7-day price declines in DG (-4.39%) and DLTR (-6.13%) are unrelated to this legislation.
Uyghur Policy Act of 2025
The Uyghur Policy Act of 2025 (S.1542) is an early-stage bill referred to committee, introducing mandatory supply chain scrutiny for Xinjiang-linked goods. No market impact is expected at this point given the procedural status. Walmart's stock trades at $130.64, near its 52-week high of $134.69, with a 7-day gain of 0.55% and 30-day gain of 5.12%, reflecting no material reaction to the bill's introduction.
Sanctioning Russia Act of 2025
HR2548 (Sanctioning Russia Act of 2025) is a stalled bill referred to committee over a year ago with no further legislative action. It authorizes no spending and imposes no current obligations. Recent price moves in energy and bank stocks are driven by macroeconomic factors and executive orders, not this bill. Impact is effectively zero.
Expanded Student Saver’s Tax Credit Act
HR2852 (Expanded Student Saver's Tax Credit Act) is an early-stage bill that would allow full-time students to claim the Saver's Credit and later the Saver's Match. The bill has zero appropriated funding — it modifies eligibility rules only. With just 2 cosponsors and referral to the Ways and Means Committee, it faces a long legislative path. The market impact on financial sector stocks is negligible. No executive action from April 20, 2026 is relevant to this bill.
Flexible Savings Arrangements for a Healthy Robust America Act
HR2667 would allow FSA/HRA funds to roll tax-free into HSAs upon HDHP enrollment, expanding the addressable market for HSA administrators and HDHP issuers. The bill is at early stage (referred to Ways and Means, no appropriations). Recent 30-day gains for UNH (+36.1%), HUM (+40.2%) and CVS (+16.4%) are driven by broader sector momentum, not this bill alone. Near-term market impact is limited due to early legislative stage.
No Funds for Forced Labor Act
The No Funds for Forced Labor Act (S1685) is an early-stage bill in the 119th Congress that directs the U.S. Treasury to oppose World Bank loans for projects using forced labor, specifically targeting Xinjiang. It carries zero funding and is at an early legislative stage—referred to committee with only one cosponsor. Near-term market impact is negligible; incremental compliance risk exists for AAPL, AMZN, and TSLA, but no material financial consequences are expected unless the bill advances significantly.
Federal Home Loan Banks' Mission Activities Act
The Federal Home Loan Banks' Mission Activities Act (S.1439) is in early legislative stages (referred to committee). The bill structurally benefits community-focused banks by lowering their cost of funds through expanded FHLB membership and subsidized financing authorization, but the primary winners are small CDFIs and credit unions — not the large super-regionals like RF, HBAN, FITB, USB, and PNC. For these larger institutions, the bill is net neutral: they gain access to cheaper FHLB funding for community lending but face increased mandatory affordable housing program contributions and greater competition from newly eligible CDFIs. Current price action for all five tickers shows positive 30-day momentum (up 6-9%), but this is consistent with the broader financial sector rally and is not attributable to this early-stage bill. No real immediate market impact.
Climate Change Financial Risk Act of 2025
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.
Affordable Housing Credit Improvement Act of 2025
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.
Secure Space Act of 2025
The Secure Space Act of 2025 (HR2458) creates a protected domestic satellite market by barring FCC licenses to foreign entities of concern. Pure-play U.S. satellite operator IRDM is the clearest beneficiary, with a direct revenue tailwind from reduced competition. Incumbent carriers T, VZ, and TMUS face neutral near-term impact from supply constraints but gain long-term insulation for domestic satellite partnerships, with TMUS holding a relative advantage via its SpaceX/Starlink partnership. The bill passed the House on 2025-04-28 under suspension of the rules and awaits Senate action.
Other Filings by David J. Taylor
Data sourced from the U.S. House of Representatives Office of the Clerk Financial Disclosure system. Stock prices from Financial Modeling Prep. Suspicious timing flags identify coincidences between stock trades and legislative activity and do not imply any wrongdoing or illegal activity. This is not financial advice.