Week of 2026-06-22
Fifty-three trades were disclosed this week, with activity concentrated in a single senator's sweeping bond portfolio rotation and a Tennessee congressman's same-day sweep out of 13 positions across technology and industrial stocks.
The Big Picture
Sen. John Boozman (R-AR) accounted for 32 of the week's 53 disclosed transactions, rotating extensively across U.S. Treasury, mortgage-backed, and corporate bond ETFs while also making selective moves in individual stocks. Rep. Matt Van Epps (R-TN) disclosed 13 sales in a single filing, all executed on one trading day, exiting positions in major technology, industrial, and consumer brand names. Republicans submitted 52 of the 53 filings; Rep. Jonathan Jackson (D-IL) provided the only Democratic disclosure.
This Week's Notable Trades
John Boozman (R-AR)
- Bought a $50,001–$100,000 position in BondBloxx Bloomberg 5-Year Target Duration US Treasury ETF (XFIV) on May 13 — a fund that holds U.S. Treasury notes targeting a five-year maturity, suggesting a move toward intermediate-term government debt.
- Sold a $50,001–$100,000 position in iShares 3-7 Year Treasury Bond ETF (IEI) on May 13 — the simultaneous purchase of XFIV and sale of IEI points to a duration shift within his bond holdings rather than an exit from fixed income.
- Bought a $1,001–$15,000 position in Palantir Technologies Inc (PLTR) on May 15 — Palantir develops data analytics software and holds significant U.S. government and defense contracts.
- Bought a $1,001–$15,000 position in Albemarle Corp (ALB) on May 15 and sold a $1,001–$15,000 position in Ecolab Inc (ECL) on the same date — both companies in the Basic Materials sector.
- Potential conflict: Sen. Boozman serves on the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee. Albemarle is a major lithium and specialty-chemicals producer; Ecolab provides industrial water treatment and hygiene services. Both operate in sectors subject to environmental regulation within that committee's jurisdiction.
Matt Van Epps (R-TN)
- Sold a $15,001–$50,000 position in Tapestry Inc (TPR) on June 16 — Tapestry is the parent company of Coach, Kate Spade, and Stuart Weitzman; it was the largest disclosed House transaction of the week.
- Sold a $1,001–$15,000 position in Nvidia Corporation (NVDA) on June 16 — Nvidia is the dominant supplier of chips used in artificial-intelligence computing and one of the most widely tracked technology stocks.
- Sold a $1,001–$15,000 position in International Business Machines Corp (IBM) on June 16 — one of 13 positions exited in a single same-day filing that also included GE Vernova Inc (GEV), General Electric Co (GE), Southwest Airlines Co (LUV), and several other names.
- Potential conflict: Rep. Van Epps sits on the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee. Among his disclosed sales were five technology companies — Nvidia (NVDA), IBM, Microsoft Corp (MSFT), Intel Corp (INTC), and Apple Inc (AAPL) — whose business activities fall within that committee's oversight.
Thomas H. Kean (R-NJ)
- Sold a $1,001–$15,000 position in Becton Dickinson and Co (BDX) on May 21 — a medical technology company that manufactures syringes, diagnostic instruments, and laboratory equipment.
- Bought a $1,001–$15,000 position in EQT Corp (EQT) on June 1 — one of the largest U.S. natural gas producers, operating primarily in the Appalachian Basin.
- Sold a $1,001–$15,000 position in Check Point Software Technologies Ltd (CHKP) on June 1 — an Israeli-headquartered cybersecurity firm.
- Potential conflict: Rep. Kean serves on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which has jurisdiction over both healthcare and energy policy. His disclosed trades include a sale of Becton Dickinson (medical devices) and a purchase of EQT Corp (natural gas) — sectors that fall within that committee's purview.
Richard W. Allen (R-GA)
- Sold a $15,001–$50,000 position in Accenture PLC (ACN) on May 8 — a global consulting and technology services firm.
- Bought a $1,001–$15,000 position in American Express Co (AXP) on May 8 — a financial services company known primarily for its credit and charge card products.
- Bought a $1,001–$15,000 position in Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (TSM) on May 8 — the world's largest contract chip manufacturer and a frequent subject of U.S. trade and technology policy discussions.
Jonathan Jackson (D-IL)
- Sold a $15,001–$50,000 position in Microsoft Corp (MSFT) on May 12 — the week's sole Democratic disclosure.
By the Numbers
- Total trades disclosed: 53
- Party split: 52 Republican, 1 Democratic
- Most bought sector: Technology (2 trades); fixed-income bond ETFs dominated purchases by volume but are not assigned a sector category in the underlying data
- Most sold sector: Technology (9 trades), followed by Industrials (3) and Consumer Cyclical (2)
- Most active member: Sen. John Boozman (R-AR), 32 trades
- Potential conflicts flagged: 9
Notable potential conflicts this week:
- Rep. Matt Van Epps (R-TN) — House Science, Space, and Technology Committee; sold Nvidia, IBM, Microsoft, Intel, and Apple
- Sen. John Boozman (R-AR) — Senate Environment and Public Works Committee; traded Albemarle Corp (lithium and specialty chemicals) and Ecolab Inc (industrial water treatment)
- Rep. Thomas H. Kean (R-NJ) — House Energy and Commerce Committee; sold Becton Dickinson (medical devices) and bought EQT Corp (natural gas)
Late to File
No late filings were recorded among this week's disclosures.
All-time: Of 21,307 filings tracked in the database, 2,444 — or 11.5 percent — were submitted after the 45-day STOCK Act deadline. The members with the most late filings on record are Rep. Sheri Biggs (171), 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 federal law; it does not by itself indicate improper trading.
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.