Party

Republican Stock Trades

Republican members of Congress in both chambers are required to disclose stock transactions above $1,000 within 45 days under the STOCK Act. Congressional stock trading is bipartisan: members of both parties hold individual securities and must file public disclosures with the House Clerk and Senate Office of Public Records. This page aggregates all trades reported by Republican legislators, sorted by most recent filing date.

504

Total Republican disclosures

33

Members trading

49%

% purchases

Most active Republican traders by disclosure count

Most traded tickers by Republicans

Recent Republican disclosures

MemberTickerTypeAmount
EQTPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
CHKPSale$1,001 - $15,000
BDXSale$1,001 - $15,000
AMCRPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
TPRSale$15,001 - $50,000
MSFTSale$1,001 - $15,000
METASale$1,001 - $15,000
LUVSale$1,001 - $15,000
NVDASale$1,001 - $15,000
AAPLSale$1,001 - $15,000
IBMSale$1,001 - $15,000
INTCSale$1,001 - $15,000
GEVSale$1,001 - $15,000
GESale$1,001 - $15,000
XOMSale$1,001 - $15,000
AMZNSale$1,001 - $15,000
GOOGLSale$1,001 - $15,000
XTWOPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
XFIVPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
AGZPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
TLHPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
SCHPPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
GBILPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
JMBSPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
GIGBPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
MBBPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
IEFPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
CMBSPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
PLTRPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
ALBPurchase$1,001 - $15,000

Frequently asked questions

Do Republican members of Congress trade stocks?

Yes. Republican senators and representatives are required to publicly disclose stock transactions over $1,000 within 45 days under the STOCK Act, the same as Democratic members. Congressional stock trading is bipartisan — members of both parties hold and actively trade individual securities.

What sectors do Republicans in Congress invest in most?

Republican members of Congress show broad market exposure across technology, financial services, healthcare, energy, and defense sectors — similar in distribution to Democratic members. Energy and defense names have historically appeared more frequently in Republican portfolios, though the patterns are not sharply differentiated.

Have Republicans opposed banning congressional stock trading?

Views within the Republican Party on congressional trading bans are mixed. Some Republican legislators have co-sponsored trading restriction bills. Others have opposed them on grounds of property rights or administrative complexity. The issue has not fallen cleanly along party lines. As of mid-2026, no ban has passed.

Where can I compare Republican and Democrat trading patterns?

Capitol Trader's trade feed at /latest-trades displays party affiliation alongside each disclosure. The /democrat-stock-trades page provides the equivalent view for Democratic members. The leaderboard at /leaderboard ranks all members by disclosure volume with party labels.