Washington · Established 2026

The Potomac Ledger

Tracking Washington Stock Trades · Decoded Each Week

Congress Edition

Week of 2026-07-13

One hundred nine trades were disclosed this week, with Rep. Ro Khanna's sweeping 52-transaction filing accounting for nearly half the total and Industrials emerging as the most actively traded sector on both the buy and sell sides.

The Big Picture

Members of Congress disclosed 109 trades this week spanning more than a dozen sectors. Nearly half of those disclosures came from a single filing by Rep. Ro Khanna of California, making him by far the most active member this period. Democrats accounted for 83 of the 109 total transactions; Republicans accounted for 26. Industrials and Financial Services drew the heaviest buying, while Industrials and Technology led on the sell side — an unusual pattern in which the same sector topped both lists.

This Week's Notable Trades

Ro Khanna (D-CA)

Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI)

Rich McCormick (R-GA)

April Delaney (D-MD)

Maria Elvira Salazar (R-FL)

By the Numbers

The three most significant potential overlaps this week:

Late to File

Under the STOCK Act, members must disclose a trade within 45 days of the transaction date. This week's late filing: Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-NY) — McKesson Corp (MCK), 548 days late. McKesson is one of the country's largest pharmaceutical distribution companies. The trade date was January 7, 2025; the disclosure was not filed until July 9, 2026.

All-time: Across 21,531 disclosures in the dataset, 11.4% — or 2,452 filings — were submitted after the 45-day deadline. The members with the most late filings on record 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 compliance matter; it does not indicate 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.

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