Congressional Stock Trading Alerts
The best congressional trading workflow is not refreshing a dashboard. It is knowing when the next relevant disclosure arrives.
What to alert on
Start with the two alert types that map cleanly to intent: politicians and tickers. A Pelosi alert answers one question; an NVDA alert answers another. Both are easier to act on than a broad feed.
- Politician alerts for lawmakers you follow closely.
- Ticker alerts for companies in your portfolio or research list.
- Notable trade alerts for large, fast-filed, or committee-relevant transactions.
Why alerts beat manual checks
Congressional filings arrive unevenly. A saved watchlist turns sporadic public records into a repeatable monitoring habit, especially for journalists, researchers, and active investors.
What good alert emails include
A useful alert should include the lawmaker, ticker, transaction type, amount range, transaction date, filing date, delay, and a source link. Context is what keeps alerts from becoming noise.
How to read this research
Public source
Built from House and Senate STOCK Act disclosures, not anonymous tips.
Range-aware
Reported amounts are shown as disclosure ranges instead of fake precision.
Context first
Filing delay, transaction type, and committee relevance are treated as separate signals.
Weekly trade digest
Five notable congressional trades, source links, and plain-English context every Sunday.
Next research paths
FAQ
Can I get alerts for a single ticker?
Yes. Add a ticker watchlist entry and future matching disclosures can be monitored from the Alerts page.
Are alerts investment advice?
No. Alerts are informational notifications based on public disclosures. They do not recommend buying or selling securities.