Who is Angus King?
Angus King is an Independent U.S. Senator from Maine, where he has served since 2013. Before the Senate, he served two terms as Governor of Maine from 1995 to 2003, also as an Independent. He caucuses with Senate Democrats.
King served on the Armed Services Committee, the Intelligence Committee, and the Energy and Natural Resources Committee. His Maine roots and his leadership on clean energy have been consistent themes throughout his Senate tenure. He has been an advocate for offshore wind development and is one of the few sitting senators to have run a small business — a television production company — earlier in his career.
Most Traded Stocks
Based on all STOCK Act filings in Capitol Trader's database, Angus King has traded these stocks most frequently:
| Ticker | Purchases | Sales | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| UBER | ↑ 1 | ↓ 1 | 2 |
| PYPL | ↑ 1 | ↓ 1 | 2 |
| ONON | ↑ 1 | ↓ 1 | 2 |
| NFLX | ↑ 1 | ↓ 1 | 2 |
| MSFT | ↑ 1 | ↓ 1 | 2 |
| META | ↑ 1 | ↓ 1 | 2 |
| LLY | ↑ 1 | ↓ 1 | 2 |
| BX | ↑ 1 | ↓ 1 | 2 |
| ADSK | ↑ 1 | ↓ 1 | 2 |
| XOM | ↑ 1 | — | 1 |
Net buying activity has been heaviest in XOM.
Trading Pattern Analysis
King has disclosed 35 stock transactions in Capitol Trader's database. His committee exposure across Armed Services, Intelligence, and Energy creates broad policy overlap with publicly traded companies.
His publicly stated positions on clean energy and his Energy and Natural Resources Committee role make his portfolio disclosures particularly watched by analysts tracking the intersection of legislative priorities and personal financial activity.
Recent Disclosed Trades
The six most recent STOCK Act disclosures filed by Angus King:
Showing 6 most recent. View all 35 trades →
How to Interpret These Disclosures
All trade data shown here comes from official STOCK Act filings. Using this public government data for investment research is entirely legal — the STOCK Act was designed precisely to give citizens visibility into congressional trading activity.
Key limitations to keep in mind: the STOCK Act allows up to 45 days between a transaction and its public disclosure. By the time you see a filing, any information advantage that may have existed at the time of the trade has likely been incorporated into market prices.
Trade amounts are disclosed as ranges, not exact figures. For example, a filing showing "$50,001 – $100,000" means the actual amount could be anywhere in that bracket. This limits precision in dollar-value analysis.
