Congressional Trader
Guide

How to read STOCK Act disclosures

Learn how to read STOCK Act disclosures by separating transaction date, filing date, transaction type, amount range, source record, and interpretation limits.

Direct answer

Read a STOCK Act disclosure by separating what the filing says from what it cannot prove: it can show a covered transaction, date, asset, type, filer, and amount range, but it does not prove motive, exact execution price, or future returns.

Workflow

Step 1

Check who filed

Start with the filer and chamber so the disclosure is tied to the correct lawmaker profile.

Browse lawmakers
Step 2

Compare dates

Read transaction date and filing date together. The difference is the disclosure delay.

Latest guide
Step 3

Read amount as a range

The public record usually uses value bands. Do not convert a range into fake exact precision.

Field guide
Step 4

Open the source context

Use the tracker for speed and structure, but keep the underlying public filing as the authority.

Open feed

App fields used in this guide

These are product field names, included so the guide connects to the actual tracker instead of staying abstract.

FieldApp keyExampleHow to read it
Lawmakerpolitician_nameNancy PelosiThe member or covered filer connected to the public disclosure.
TickertickerNVDAThe normalized public company ticker used for ticker pages and alerts.
Transaction typetransaction_typepurchaseThe disclosed action, such as purchase, sale, or partial sale.
Amount rangeamount_min / amount_max$1,001 - $15,000The reported value band, not an exact position size.
Trade datetransaction_date2026-05-12The date the transaction was reported to have occurred.
Filing datefiling_date2026-05-20The date the disclosure became public in the filing workflow.
Disclosure delaydisclosure_delay_days8 daysThe gap between the transaction date and the filing date.
Notable flagis_notabletrueA product signal used to surface large, fast-filed, repeated, or context-heavy trades.

What the filing can and cannot tell you

A disclosure can tell you that a reported transaction happened in a stated category and amount band. It can also tell you when the report was filed and which public source it came from.

It cannot tell you the filer intent, exact trade price, full portfolio, inside information, or whether a future return will be positive.

  • `transaction_type` describes the reported action.
  • `amount_min` and `amount_max` preserve the public value band.
  • `raw_source` or source links help you trace the filing back to the public record.
  • `ai_interpretation` is context, not a legal or investment conclusion.

Why disclosure delay matters

A newly published filing is not necessarily a newly executed trade. A disclosure with a long delay can still be important for research, but it is weaker as a time-sensitive market signal.

That is why Congressional Trader exposes `disclosure_delay_days` instead of only sorting by headline freshness.

Official context

Congressional Trader organizes public records for research. Official House and Senate disclosure systems remain the authority for filing rules and source records.

Related paths

FAQ

What is the most important field in a disclosure?

There is no single field. Read transaction date, filing date, transaction type, amount range, lawmaker, and ticker together.

Do STOCK Act disclosures show exact dollar amounts?

Usually no. They commonly show a transaction value range, so the app preserves ranges instead of creating exact values.

Can a disclosure prove insider trading?

No. It is a public record of a reported transaction. It does not prove intent, legality, or use of inside information.