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Federal Lobbying Data · Senate LDA Filings · Updated Quarterly
LobbySpend

Updated May 2026 · Senate LDA filings

How Much Does Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association Spend on Lobbying?

Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association has disclosed $8.8M in federal lobbying across 4 policy areas, making it a mid-tier spender in the LobbySpend index. Top reported issues include Financial Institutions, Taxation, Banking. The organization carries a LobbySpend Influence Score of 54/100 (grade C), based on disclosed spend, issue breadth, and revolving-door staffing.

Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association Lobbying Snapshot

Total Disclosed Lobbying Spend$8.8M
Most Recent Year (2024)$1.7M
Influence Score54/100 (grade C)
Policy Issue Areas4
Named Lobbyists6
Revolving-Door Lobbyists2
IndustryTrade Association
Filer Typeboth
Rank Among Tracked Filers#146 of 500 (top 29%)

What the Disclosed Lobbying Covers

Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association's $8.8M in disclosed federal lobbying puts it in the mid-tier of registered filers. Spending in the seven-figure range is common for established trade groups, mid-size corporations, and advocacy organizations that maintain a steady but not aggressive presence on Capitol Hill.

Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association's disclosed lobbying focuses on a narrow 4-issue footprint. A focused issue list usually means the organization concentrates its federal engagement on a small set of bills or rulemakings directly relevant to its core business.

The Senate Lobbying Disclosure Act requires anyone who contacts covered federal officials on behalf of a paying client — and crosses time and dollar thresholds — to register and file quarterly. Filings are publicly available through the Senate Office of Public Records, which is the original source for every dollar figure on this page. The same filings feed downstream research at OpenSecrets, where you can cross-reference individual lobbyists, bills tracked, and related campaign contributions.

Top Issues Reported by Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association

Top Spend Categories & Lobbyist Bench

2 of 6 lobbyists reported by Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association (33%) disclose prior federal government service. That share is common at established government affairs operations that explicitly hire from agency and committee staff.

Among the named bench, lobbyists with disclosed prior federal service include Thomas J. Quinn (Former Legislative Director, Senate HELP Committee); Hunter H. Biden (Former Counsel, Senate Commerce Committee). The covered-position field on LDA cover sheets captures executive-branch and senior congressional roles held within the prior two years.

Industry & Issue Context

Within the Trade Association sector, Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association ranks #0 of 113 tracked organizations by disclosed lobbying spend. The sector leader is US Chamber of Commerce at $387.8M; the sector average is $9.5M. Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association's $8.8M sits 8% below the sector average.

Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association's LobbySpend Influence Score of 54/100 (grade C) is the most common grade in the index — it covers organizations with established but moderate federal advocacy programs. The score combines disclosed total spend (40%), issue breadth (30%), and revolving-door connections (30%). A C-grade is typical of mid-size corporations and trade associations with steady quarterly filings on a focused issue set.

Year-over-Year Trend

Across the 5-year window from 2020 to 2024, Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association's annual disclosed lobbying spend has held roughly steady — $1.7M at the start versus $1.7M at the most recent year-end. Year-to-year wobbles inside that range usually reflect timing of legislative cycles rather than a strategic shift.

Annual Disclosed Spend, 20202024

YearSpendYoY Change
2020$1.7M
2021$1.8M+4.8%
2022$1.8M+4.5%
2023$1.8M-3.3%
2024$1.7M-5.1%

How This Page Is Built (Methodology)

Every dollar on this page comes from quarterly filings submitted under the Lobbying Disclosure Act and published by the Senate Office of Public Records. We pull those filings via the lda.senate.gov public API, deduplicate amendments, and aggregate by registrant or client across the years shown. The "amount" for each filing is the larger of reported income (for lobbying firms) or reported expenses (for in-house programs), which is the standard convention used by both the Senate's own dashboards and outside researchers including OpenSecrets.

The LobbySpend Influence Score is a composite indicator: 40% disclosed total spend, 30% number of distinct general issue areas lobbied on, and 30% share of named lobbyists with prior federal government service. The score is descriptive — it summarizes what was disclosed — and should not be read as a measure of effectiveness, ethics, or political outcomes. Read the full methodology for the exact formulas, caveats, and known limitations of LDA disclosures.

Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association has disclosed $8.8M in federal lobbying across 4 policy areas, making it a mid-tier spender in the LobbySpend index. Top reported issues include Financial Institutions, Taxation, Banking. The organization carries a LobbySpend Influence Score of 54/100 (grade C), based on disclosed spend, issue breadth, and revolving-door staffing.

This answer pulls from the Senate Lobbying Disclosure Office LD-2 filings, the authoritative federal source for U.S. federal lobbying disclosure. The headline number above is the direct answer; what follows is the additional context most readers need to use the answer for a real decision rather than just a fact lookup.

For readers turning this answer into action: cross-reference against the underlying the Senate Lobbying Disclosure Office LD-2 filings record before acting on time-sensitive decisions. The site renders the data as it was published; subsequent revisions can shift the picture, and the live federal data is always the authoritative current reference.