๐Ÿ›๏ธ Congress Trades

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โญ Top Performers (2024)

๐Ÿ“Š Recent Trades

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๐Ÿ“‹ About STOCK Act Data

Data Source

STOCK Act requires Congress to disclose trades within 45 days. Data from Quiver Quantitative + Unusual Whales performance ratings.

Tier Ratings

  • S: Top 1% performers
  • A: Outperformed market
  • B: Average performance

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45-day disclosure lag. Educational only. Not investment advice. DYOR.

Track Congressional Stock Trades in Real-Time

The BRRR Congressional Stock Trades tracker monitors real-time STOCK Act disclosures from US Congress members, including Nancy Pelosi, Dan Crenshaw, Tommy Tuberville, and other politicians. This comprehensive database aggregates stock transactions from Quiver Quantitative's congressional trading data, displaying purchases and sales with amounts, tickers, and disclosure dates updated daily.

What Are STOCK Act Disclosures?

The Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act of 2012 requires all members of Congress to publicly disclose stock trades above $1,000 within 45 days. These filings include transaction dates, ticker symbols, amounts (in ranges), and whether the trade was a purchase or sale. The law was designed to prevent insider trading by politicians who receive non-public information through committee hearings, briefings, and legislative processes.

45-Day Reporting Lag Explained

Unlike institutional investors who must file 13F forms quarterly, Congress members have only 45 days to report trades. This creates a significant information lag โ€” by the time you see a trade, the market impact may have already occurred. However, this data remains valuable for identifying patterns, sector preferences, and potential regulatory catalysts. Politicians often trade ahead of committee hearings, legislation, or regulatory announcements that could impact specific sectors.

Notable Trading Patterns

Top Performing Politicians (2024):

  • โ€ข Nancy Pelosi: Tech-heavy portfolio with options activity
  • โ€ข Dan Crenshaw: Energy and defense sector focus
  • โ€ข Tommy Tuberville: Agricultural and commodity trades
  • โ€ข Josh Gottheimer: Financial services concentration

Common Sector Preferences:

  • โ€ข Technology: NVDA, MSFT, GOOGL, AAPL
  • โ€ข Healthcare: Biotech stocks before FDA announcements
  • โ€ข Energy: Oil stocks before pipeline decisions
  • โ€ข Defense: Aerospace stocks before budget votes

Frequently Asked Questions

Is congressional insider trading legal?

While the STOCK Act prohibits trading on non-public information, enforcement is limited. Politicians can legally trade as long as they don't use classified briefings or committee information directly for investment decisions.

How often do politicians trade?

Approximately 130 members of Congress actively trade individual stocks, with some making dozens of transactions per quarter. The most active traders include members of financial services, energy, and healthcare committees.

Why do some politicians outperform the market?

Access to economic data, regulatory timelines, and industry briefings may provide informational advantages. However, attribution could also reflect skilled stock picking, insider networks, or statistical variance in small sample sizes.

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