
Thomas Suozzi
Price Movement Since Trade
How each stock has moved from the trade date to the most recent close.
Suspicious Timing Detected
4 flagsThomas Suozzi sold $1,001 - $15,000 in $NEE on 2025-10-14 — 35 days before the CLOSE Act (HR6081) was introduced, which aims to increase regulatory burdens for oil and gas producers.
Thomas Suozzi sold $15,001 - $50,000 in $WMT on 2025-10-14 — 48 days before the Non-Domiciled CDL Integrity Act (HR5688) was reported out of committee, a bill restricting commercial driver's licenses.
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 | Government Securities | United States Treasury Bill(Government Securities) | $15K-$50K | — | — | — | Oct 2, 2025 |
| BUY | Government Securities | US Treasury Bill(Government Securities) | $15K-$50K | — | — | — | Oct 2, 2025 |
| SELL | $WMT | Walmart Inc. Common Stock | $15K-$50K | $107.21 | — | — | Oct 14, 2025 |
| SELL | $IP | INTL PAPER CO 4 C PR (INPAP) | $1K-$15K | — | — | — | Oct 14, 2025 |
| SELL | $NEE | NextEra Energy, Inc. Common Stock | $1K-$15K | $84.64 | — | — | Oct 14, 2025 |
| SELL | $WY | Weyerhaeuser Company Common Stock | $1K-$15K | $23.90 | — | — | Oct 14, 2025 |
Connected Legislative Activity
10 signalsThese bills and contracts share tickers or sectors with this filing's trades.
CLOSE Act
The CLOSE Act (HR6081) is an early-stage House bill that would eliminate the emission aggregation exemption for oil and gas wells under the Clean Air Act and require EPA to list hydrogen sulfide as a hazardous air pollutant. While the bill has 23 Democratic cosponsors and faces a long legislative path, it creates a regulatory overhang for U.S. E&P operators. Recent DPA energy executive orders (April 2026) conflict with the bill's direction, adding policy uncertainty.
To authorize the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development to award grants to eligible entities to select pre-reviewed designs of covered structures of mixed-income housing for use in the jurisdiction of the eligible entity, and for other purposes.
HR5907 is an early-stage, unfunded authorization bill that creates a HUD grant program for pre-reviewed mixed-income housing designs. With zero dollars appropriated, no committee markup, and no Senate companion, it has no near-term market impact.
To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to establish a refundable childhood education tax credit with monthly advance payments.
HR6634, introduced by Rep. Fields (D-LA) on 2025-12-11, proposes a refundable monthly child tax credit of $667/child for education expenses (up to $8,004/year per child), phased out above 300% of the federal poverty line. The bill is at an early stage — referred to the House Ways and Means Committee — with no further action recorded as of analysis date 2026-04-30. Consumer discretionary and mass-market retailers (WMT, TGT, AMZN) are structurally positioned to benefit from increased household spending, though passage is highly uncertain given the ~$2-3 trillion 10-year fiscal cost and partisan dynamics. HAS, MAT, and DIS have moderate upside exposure as secondary beneficiaries of incremental family spending.
To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to expand the meaning and eligibility of energy communities for purposes of the increased renewable electricity production and increased clean electricity investment credit rates.
HR6474 expands renewable energy tax credit eligibility to non-metropolitan statistical areas, adding a 10% bonus credit for wind, solar, and clean electricity projects in rural America. The bill is early-stage (referred to Ways and Means, December 2025) with no appropriations; it modifies existing tax credit statutes. Real market data shows NEE near 52-week highs ($96.47) with positive momentum, FSLR flat near $195.50, and ENPH under pressure at $32.57, indicating that broader interest rate concerns currently outweigh incremental rural tax credit policy.
LET’S Protect Workers Act
HR6597 (LET'S Protect Workers Act) would dramatically increase civil penalties for child labor and wage/hour violations, raising maximum per-violation fines ~10x to $150,000 per employee. The bill is in early committee stage with no immediate market impact, but it represents a structural regulatory risk for large hourly-workforce employers. Dollar General ($DG) and Dollar Tree ($DLTR) face the highest proportional exposure given thin margins and history of violations.
Non-Domiciled CDL Integrity Act
The Non-Domiciled CDL Integrity Act (HR5688), awaiting floor action in the House, will restrict CDL issuance for non-domiciled individuals, exacerbating the existing driver shortage. This regulation will increase labor costs for trucking firms like JBHT, ODFL, and XPO, and raise supply chain expenses for retailers like WMT. Recent market data shows JBHT up 16.18% in 30 days, ODFL up 8%, XPO up 12.56%, and WMT up 4.01%, but the bill represents a structural cost headwind that is not yet priced in.
Roadless Area Conservation Act of 2025
The Roadless Area Conservation Act of 2025 (S.2042) would permanently ban development on ~58.5 million acres of National Forest roadless areas, removing a major future source of federal timber supply. The bill is in committee with 25 cosponsors; passage probability is moderate. Real market data shows Weyerhaeuser ($WY) at $24.72 (near 52-week midpoint) and Louisiana-Pacific ($LPX) at $71.50 (near 52-week low), with both stocks declining over the past month. Near-term price impact is muted given the bill's early stage, but the structural supply constraint would be bullish for private timberland owners like $WY and bearish for federal-timber-dependent mills like some $LPX operations.
Employee Profit-Sharing Encouragement Act of 2025
HR6418 is a single-sponsor bill in early legislative stage (referred to Ways and Means). No hearings, no companion bill, no CBO score. The structural link to payroll software providers is indirect and contingent on future legislative action. Market impact is negligible near-term.
No Robot Bosses Act
The No Robot Bosses Act (HR6371) is a procedural early-stage bill with zero near-term market impact. It imposes compliance costs on HR technology vendors but has no funding authorization and has stalled since referral to three committees in December 2025. No actionable trading signal for retail investors at this time.
SAWMILL Act
The SAWMILL Act (HR6277) is an early-stage bill establishing a federal loan guarantee program for sawmill and wood-processing facilities near federal lands slated for ecological restoration. If enacted, it reduces the cost of capital for mill expansion and modernization, directly benefiting timber and wood products companies like $WY, $LPX, and $WFG. The bill has a companion in the Senate ($S2221), increasing its probability of advancement, but remains in committee with no funding yet appropriated.
Other Filings by Thomas Suozzi
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.