Nancy Pelosi's stock trades are publicly required by law. Her household has disclosed options calls in NVIDIA, Apple, Alphabet, and Tesla that beat the market — and we track every one.
Under the STOCK Act, every congressional household trade over $1,000 must be publicly disclosed within 45 days. Nancy Pelosi's husband Paul — a San Francisco venture capitalist — is the primary trader, and his disclosed options positions in NVIDIA, Apple, Alphabet, and Tesla attracted significant attention due to their timing relative to legislation Nancy's chamber was advancing. We track every disclosure from 2021 to the present, noting what Congress was working on at the time of each trade.
Every Paul Pelosi options call and put since 2021
Direct equity purchases and sales by both Nancy and Paul
Timing context: what legislation was active at each trade date
Committee assignments overlaid on relevant sector trades
The NVIDIA calls, Apple calls, and other high-profile trades in full
Clear labeling of Nancy vs Paul on every disclosure
The two most-watched stock traders in Congress — one from each side of the aisle. $8/mo instead of $10/mo.
Includes 2 features
Every political trade tracker we offer: Trump stocks, Trump crypto, Pelosi, all of Congress, and US government equity stakes. $18/mo instead of $25/mo.
Includes 5 features
Multiple analyses have shown that the Pelosi household's disclosed long call option positions in major technology companies — including NVIDIA, Apple, Microsoft, and Alphabet — delivered significant returns over the periods analyzed. The NVIDIA calls purchased in mid-2022, shortly before the CHIPS Act was passed (legislation Nancy Pelosi was involved in advancing), became particularly widely discussed. It's Nancy's husband Paul who does the trading, but since it's disclosed under Nancy's congressional filing, it's universally known as "Pelosi trades."
Yes, completely legal. The STOCK Act governs disclosure requirements, not trading prohibitions. Members of Congress and their spouses can trade individual stocks as long as they file the required disclosure within 45 days. Multiple efforts to ban congressional stock trading have been proposed but none have passed into law.
Nancy's husband Paul Pelosi is the active trader — he's a venture capitalist who manages the household investment portfolio. But because the trades are legally required to be disclosed through Nancy's congressional filing (the STOCK Act covers spouses), they appear under her name in public records. Everyone refers to them as "Nancy Pelosi trades" even though Paul is the actual decision-maker. We label each entry clearly — Nancy's direct trades vs Paul's spousal disclosures.
The STOCK Act allows up to 45 days between a trade and disclosure, so there is inherent lag. You'll see trades after they've been disclosed, not in real time. Our database updates the moment new filings appear, minimizing your lag as much as the law allows. Many investors use this data to understand positioning and patterns rather than trade-for-trade copying.
This tracker is focused on the Pelosi household. For all 535 members of Congress across both chambers, see the Congress Insider Watch feature — or get it bundled with Pelosi Trades in the Full Political Pack.
Other members who use Pelosi Trades also track these.
Trump has to publicly disclose every stock trade he makes. We pull those filings every morning so you can see exactly what he's buying.
535 members of Congress trade stocks while writing laws that regulate those same companies. Every trade must be disclosed by law. We track them all — and flag the ones that look suspicious.
Type any ticker. Get a decisive buy or sell — with a specific entry zone, stop loss, and price target. No hedging. No "it depends."
Hedge funds and commercial traders have an edge — not because they're smarter, but because they read the same public data differently. The CFTC publishes it every week. We translate it.