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LobbyMap

Intercontinental Exchange

Finance & Banking · Lobbying Client

C
Influence Score
53/100
Moderate Influence
$4.8M
Total Lobby Spend
4
Policy Issues
3
Lobbyists
1
Revolving Door

Intercontinental Exchange reported $4.8 million in federal lobbying expenditures (2020-2024) as disclosed in Senate LDA filings. The organization's lobbying activity spans 4 policy areas, with primary focus on Financial Institutions, Commodities, Taxation. This data is drawn from quarterly disclosure reports filed with the Secretary of the Senate under the Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995. All lobbying disclosure data sourced from Senate lobbying disclosure filings filed under the Lobbying Disclosure Act.

Annual Lobbying Spend

Policy Issues

Government Entities Contacted

Office of the U.S. Trade Representative
U.S. Senate
Securities & Exchange Commission
Dept of Health & Human Services
Dept of Housing & Urban Development
U.S. House of Representatives
Small Business Administration

Recent Filings

PeriodRegistrantIssuesLobbyistsAmount
2024 Oct-DecInvariant LLC
GOVCDTFIN+1
3$220K
2024 Jul-SepAkin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld
FINTAX
2$229K
2024 Apr-JunArnold & Porter
FINCDTTAX
2$261K
2024 Jan-MarHolland & Knight
FINTAXCDT
1$226K
2023 Oct-DecSubject Matter
FINTAXGOV+1
1$224K
2023 Jul-SepCovington & Burling
TAXCDTGOV+1
3$274K
2023 Apr-JunStewart & Stewart
CDTTAXGOV+1
1$208K
2023 Jan-MarFranklin Square Group
FINTAX
3$210K

Intercontinental Exchange Lobbying FAQ

Intercontinental Exchange has spent $4.8M on federal lobbying across 4 policy areas. This includes spending on registered lobbyists and direct government contacts.

Intercontinental Exchange lobbies on 4 policy issues, including Financial Institutions, Commodities, Taxation, Government Issues. These disclosures are filed quarterly with the Senate Office of Public Records.

Intercontinental Exchange has an Influence Score of 53/100 (Grade C). This proprietary score is based on total lobby spend (40%), policy issue breadth (30%), and revolving door connections (30%).

Intercontinental Exchange employs 3 registered lobbyists, of whom 1 have revolving door connections — meaning they previously held government positions before becoming lobbyists.

Intercontinental Exchange has contacted 7 government entities as part of their lobbying activities, including Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, U.S. Senate, Securities & Exchange Commission.

Sources: Senate Office of Public Records (LDA), OpenSecrets.org
Last updated:

Lobbying data is sourced from quarterly Lobbying Disclosure Act (LDA) filings with the Senate Office of Public Records. Influence Scores combine total spend (40%), issue breadth (30%), and revolving door connections (30%). Filings may be amended after initial submission.