Week of 2026-06-15
One hundred and two congressional stock trades were disclosed this week, dominated by an 88-trade batch from Rep. Ro Khanna and punctuated by a six-figure energy sell from Rep. Chip Roy.
The Big Picture
Nearly all of this week's activity traces to a single large filing: Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) disclosed 88 trades spanning industrials, financial services, healthcare, and technology, accounting for the vast majority of the week's Democratic total. Set that aside, and the week's remaining disclosures were modest by comparison.
Industrials was the most actively purchased sector — railroads, airlines, building-products companies, and diversified manufacturers — while technology led all sectors sold. In all, 26 trades carried a potential conflict-of-interest flag, most of them within Khanna's industrials purchases.
This Week's Notable Trades
Ro Khanna (D-CA)
- Bought a $15,001–$50,000 position in AbbVie Inc (ABBV) on May 1 — the largest single purchase in Khanna's filing and among the bigger buys disclosed this week. AbbVie is a pharmaceutical company known for the arthritis drug Humira and other prescription medicines.
- Bought a $1,001–$15,000 position in Expeditors International of Washington Inc (EXPD) on May 1, a global freight and logistics company.
- Sold a $1,001–$15,000 position in Nvidia Corporation (NVDA) on May 1 — a reduction in the leading AI chipmaker by a member who represents California's Silicon Valley corridor.
- Sold $1,001–$15,000 positions in Micron Technology Inc (MU) on three separate dates in May (May 11, May 12, and May 26), trimming the memory-chip maker steadily across the month.
- Potential conflict: Khanna sits on the House Armed Services Committee and the House Oversight Committee. Several of his industrials purchases this week — including railroad operators CSX Corp (CSX) and Norfolk Southern Corp (NSC), airlines United Airlines Holdings Inc (UAL) and Southwest Airlines Co (LUV), and defense-adjacent manufacturers such as Rockwell Automation Inc (ROK) and EMCOR Group Inc (EME) — represent sectors with potential overlap with his committee jurisdictions over defense procurement and government operations.
Chip Roy (R-TX)
- Sold a $100,001–$250,000 position in Atlas Energy Solutions Inc (AESI) on May 13 — the week's largest single disclosed trade by dollar range. Atlas Energy Solutions supplies proppant (the sand-like material injected during oil and gas fracking) and logistics services to the Permian Basin energy industry.
Mike Kelly (R-PA)
- Sold a $15,001–$50,000 position in Bristol-Myers Squibb Co (BMY) on May 7 — the second-largest disclosed trade among this week's notable filings.
- Sold a $1,001–$15,000 position in Comcast Corp (CMCSA) on May 7, the cable, broadband, and media company.
- Potential conflict: Kelly serves on the House Ways and Means Committee, which has significant legislative jurisdiction over Medicare, Medicaid, and federal healthcare financing. Bristol-Myers Squibb is a major pharmaceutical company whose drugs are widely reimbursed through federal health programs.
John Fetterman (D-PA)
- Bought a $1,001–$15,000 position in Expedia Group Inc (EXPE) on May 6 — disclosed as a corporate bond rather than a stock. A corporate bond is a debt instrument: the buyer lends money to the company and receives fixed interest payments, rather than owning a stake in the firm.
- Potential conflict: Fetterman sits on the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee, which oversees the travel, tourism, and online commerce industries. Expedia Group is one of the largest online travel booking platforms in the United States.
Gilbert Cisneros (D-CA)
- Sold a $1,001–$15,000 position in Palantir Technologies Inc (PLTR) on May 15 — Palantir provides data analytics and artificial intelligence software to U.S. defense, intelligence, and government agencies.
- Sold a $1,001–$15,000 position in GE HealthCare Technologies Inc (GEHC) on May 15, a major manufacturer of medical imaging equipment and diagnostic tools.
- Sold a $1,001–$15,000 position in Flex Ltd (FLEX) on May 14, a global electronics manufacturing services company.
- Potential conflict: Cisneros serves on the House Armed Services Committee. Two of his trades this week — a sell of Primoris Services Corp (PRIM), a specialty infrastructure contractor with government project exposure, and a sell of Global Payments Inc (GPN) — were flagged for potential overlap with his committee's jurisdiction.
By the Numbers
- Total trades disclosed this week: 102
- Party split: 97 Democratic, 5 Republican
- Most bought sectors: Industrials (21 trades), Consumer Cyclical (15), Financial Services (15)
- Most sold sectors: Technology (8 trades), Healthcare (3), Industrials (3)
- Most active member: Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) with 88 disclosed trades in a single filing
- Potential conflict flags: 26
Most significant potential conflicts this week:
- Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) — bought railroad, airline, and industrial-manufacturer stocks while serving on the House Armed Services and Oversight committees
- Rep. Mike Kelly (R-PA) — sold Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY) while serving on the House Ways and Means Committee, which oversees federal healthcare financing
- Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) — bought an Expedia Group (EXPE) corporate bond while serving on the Senate Commerce Committee, which has jurisdiction over the online travel industry
- Rep. Gilbert Cisneros (D-CA) — sold Primoris Services (PRIM) and Global Payments (GPN) while serving on the House Armed Services Committee
Late to File
No late filings were disclosed this week. Under the STOCK Act, members of Congress must report a personal securities transaction within 45 days of the trade date.
All-time: Across 21,150 total disclosures tracked in this dataset, 2,444 — or 11.6 percent — were filed after the 45-day deadline. The members with the most all-time late filings are Rep. Sheri Biggs (171 late filings), Rep. Julia Letlow (136), Rep. Valerie Hoyle (114), Sen. Thomas H. Tuberville (105), and Rep. Patrick Fallon (89). Late disclosure is a timing violation under the STOCK Act; it is not necessarily indicative of wrongdoing.
The Fine Print
Data derived from public STOCK Act disclosures. Disclosure date is not the trade date (filings lag 30-45 days). Dollar figures are disclosed ranges, not exact amounts. Conflict-of-interest flags are heuristic "potential overlaps," not assertions of wrongdoing. Not investment advice.