One-Day Disclosure Delay: How to Read Matt Van Epps' June 2026 Filing
Matt Van Epps' latest filing is useful because it shows a clean one-day gap between transaction date and notification date.
What one-day delay means
In the Van Epps source PDF, each visible row is dated June 16, 2026 and notified on June 17, 2026. Congressional Trader therefore shows a one-day delay on the homepage's latest notable rows.
A one-day delay does not make a trade predictive. It simply means the public record is close enough to the transaction date that readers can evaluate the filing without the same timing problem created by long-delayed reports.
Why latest filings still need context
Even with a short delay, a latest filing should be read by transaction type, amount range, ticker mix, and whether the lawmaker has repeated activity. Van Epps' latest filing is a basket of sales, not one large purchase.
The distinction matters. A broad sale basket across GOOGL, AMZN, AAPL, XOM, GE, GEV, INTC, IBM, META, MSFT, NVDA, LUV, and TPR reads differently from a single concentrated buy.
- Short delay: better for current monitoring.
- Sale basket: read the whole allocation change, not only the headline ticker.
- Reported ranges: avoid false precision.
- Source PDF: still the authority for dates, ranges, and asset names.
The right workflow
For latest-trades research, start with the homepage or live feed to see what just became public, then open the source filing. Check whether the trade date is close to the filing or notification date.
After that, open ticker pages for any repeat names. For this case, the natural watchlist tickers are GEV, IBM, XOM, MSFT, NVDA, META, AAPL, and TPR.
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
What was the disclosure delay in the Van Epps filing?
The visible rows in the source PDF had June 16, 2026 transaction dates and June 17, 2026 notification dates, so the delay was one day.
Does a one-day delay make a trade actionable?
No. It makes the timing cleaner for research, but the disclosure is still informational and not investment advice.
What should I check after delay?
Check transaction type, reported range, ticker mix, source filing, and whether the same lawmaker or ticker appears again in future disclosures.