Track stock trades disclosed by members of the U.S. Congress. Under the STOCK Act, legislators must report securities transactions within 45 days. This tracker surfaces those disclosures, making it easy to see what elected officials are buying and selling.

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About Congressional Stock Trading Disclosures

The STOCK Act of 2012 requires members of the U.S. Congress and their senior staff to publicly disclose securities transactions within 45 days. These disclosures are filed with the Clerk of the House or Secretary of the Senate and made available to the public. This tracker aggregates those disclosures, making it straightforward to see what elected officials are trading in the stock market.

Congressional trading disclosures provide a unique window into the financial activities of lawmakers. Because legislators have access to non-public briefings, committee hearings, and advance knowledge of pending legislation, their trading patterns have drawn significant public interest and academic research. Studies have found that congressional stock portfolios have historically outperformed the market, though the reasons are debated among researchers.

How to Use This Tracker

Filter trades by chamber (House or Senate), transaction type (purchases or sales), or click any ticker symbol to see an enriched view that includes supply chain relationships and corporate insider activity for that company. Combining congressional trading data with insider transaction signals and supply chain intelligence can help investors understand the broader context around a particular stock.

Data Sources and Methodology

Trade data comes from official financial disclosure filings required under the STOCK Act. Transactions are reported in dollar ranges rather than exact amounts (e.g., $1,001 to $15,000). This tracker updates regularly as new disclosures are filed. Supply chain and insider enrichment data comes from SEC Form 4 and 10-K filings analyzed by the MyAllies knowledge graph.

Combine Political Signals with Smart Money Analysis

Cross-reference congressional trades with insider buying, institutional accumulation, and supply chain data.

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