
David J. Taylor
David J. Taylor (R-OH) bought $1K-$15K of $ETN (Eaton Corporation, PLC Ordinary Shares) on Dec 10, 2025, part of 3 transactions in this filing (2 buys, 1 sells).
HillSignal flagged 5 timing concerns on this filing — trades that line up closely with related legislative or contract activity.
Companies in this filing · 3
Price Movement Since Trade
How the largest positions have moved from the trade date to the most recent close.
Suspicious Timing Detected
5 flagsRep. David J. Taylor bought $1,001 - $15,000 in $HD (Home Depot, Inc.) on 2025-12-10, 48 days before the "Homebuilders Corps Act of 2026" (HR7242) was introduced, a bill that could increase the skilled labor supply for residential construction.
Rep. David J. Taylor bought $1,001 - $15,000 in $HD (Home Depot, Inc.) on 2025-12-10, 51 days before the "Combating Organized Retail Crime Act of 2025" (HR2853) advanced, a bill aimed at reducing organized retail crime.
Rep. David J. Taylor bought $1,001 - $15,000 in $ETN (Eaton Corporation, PLC Ordinary Shares) on 2025-12-10, 54 days before HR6353, a bill to waive certain requirements for public water system upgrades, was introduced.
These flags identify timing coincidences between stock trades and legislative activity. They do not imply wrongdoing. Click any bill number or ticker to see the full analysis.
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Connected Legislative Activity
10 signalsThese bills and contracts share tickers or sectors with this filing's trades.
Protecting Americans from Unsafe Drugs Act of 2026
The Protecting Americans from Unsafe Drugs Act of 2026 (HR7980) would expand FDA mandatory recall authority from controlled substances to all drugs, increasing structural operational risk and compliance costs for major pharmaceutical manufacturers. The bill is at an early legislative stage with a single Democratic sponsor, giving it low near-term passage probability. Market data shows the sector is already under pressure in April 2026 with JNJ, PFE, MRK, and AZN all down significantly over 30 days, but this bill is not yet being priced in as a material risk.
Power for the People Act of 2026
The Power for the People Act (S.3682) is an early-stage bill with zero funding and no near-term market impact. It targets data center electricity cost allocation, shifting infrastructure costs from residential ratepayers to operators. For utilities, the risk is structural but distant — only Entergy ($ETR) and NextEra's competitive arm ($NEE) face measurable downside if the bill advances, as their data center demand thesis is most priced in.
MORE WATER Act
The MORE WATER Act (S.3738) authorizes $450M for large-scale water recycling and conveyance grants in Reclamation States, but remains in Senate committee with no near-term catalyst. California water utility $CWT is the clearest structural beneficiary, but the bill is early-stage and actual funding requires separate appropriation. Current market data shows CWT at $44.64 near its 52-week low, with no price reaction to this procedural step.
E-Access Act
The E-Access Act (S.3926) is an early-stage Senate bill with zero funding that mandates consumer energy data access for third-party digital tools. It has a House companion bill (HR7741) but remains in committee with no near-term market impact. Utility stocks NEE, AEP, and SRE show no price reaction to this procedural event — their recent 30-day gains (3.77%, 3.85%) and SRE's decline (-3.08%) reflect broader market and sector trends, not this legislation.
Urban Canal Modernization Act
The Urban Canal Modernization Act (S.2753) is an early-stage authorization bill with no appropriated funds. Market data shows CAT up 24.4% over 30 days, but this move is driven by broader economic factors, not this bill. The structural link to canal equipment demand exists but provides no near-term revenue visibility.
To waive certain requirements under section 306018 of title 54, United States Code, with respect to undertakings to upgrade public water systems and treatment works.
HR6353 waives historic preservation reviews for public water system upgrades, cutting months from project timelines. At early stage, the bill provides a regulatory tailwind for water equipment makers ($AOS), engineering firms ($FLR), and water utilities ($CWT, $WTRG) — but it is only an authorization to waive a procedural review, not a funding bill. Real market data shows $AOS near its 52-week low ($62.30 vs $81.87 high) while $FLR has rallied 13.7% over the past 30 days, diverging from broader water sector weakness.
Most Favored Patient Act of 2026
HR7837, the Most Favored Patient Act of 2026, is a bearish catalyst for major pharmaceutical companies with high Medicare exposure. The bill proposes linking US Medicare drug prices to the lowest global price, directly threatening the US pricing premium that supports current industry margins. The bill is in early legislative stages but represents a credible structural threat to pharmaceutical pricing power.
E-Access Act
The E-Access Act (HR7741) mandates utility data interoperability and third-party access, which directly benefits pure-play solar inverter and energy software companies $ENPH and $SEDG by forcing utilities to open their proprietary data platforms. Despite its early legislative stage (referred to committee), the bill has a companion in the Senate (S3926) and creates structural regulatory tailwinds for grid-edge computing and home energy management. Recent 30-day price drops of -12.91% and -17.36% for $ENPH and $SEDG respectively suggest the market has not yet priced in this policy catalyst.
Homebuilders Corps Act of 2026
The Homebuilders Corps Act of 2026 is an early-stage bill that authorizes a $5,000 employer incentive grant for residential construction firms hiring Job Corps graduates. The bill has been referred to committee with no further action, and contains no appropriated funding. Near-term market impact on homebuilders or building supply companies is negligible.
Combating Organized Retail Crime Act of 2025
HR2853 (Combating Organized Retail Crime Act) has advanced to the House floor, establishing a federal aggregate-value theft prosecution framework that directly targets the economics of organized retail crime. Major brick-and-mortar retailers TGT, WMT, HD, LOW, and COST all face significant annual shrink losses from organized theft rings; this legislation creates a direct policy mechanism to reduce those losses. The bill has 206 cosponsors and an identical companion bill in the Senate, indicating strong bipartisan momentum.
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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.