Greg Landsman Stock Trades — Portfolio Tracker & Recent Disclosures

Greg Landsman's stock trades are the periodic transaction reports filed under the STOCK Act by the Democratic U.S. Representative for Ohio's 1st congressional district. These disclosures became a flashpoint in September 2024 when news broke that Landsman had failed to report 87+ stock transactions within the legally required 45-day window — a violation he described as a mistake. I have tracked his filings since they first appeared in the House disclosure system in early 2023, and the pattern is clear: a portfolio that started modest and grew quickly, concentrated in technology and energy names, managed through a spousal IRA. Landsman represents a Cincinnati-area district first elected in 2022 and serves on the House Energy and Commerce Committee for the 119th Congress.

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Who Is Greg Landsman? Background & Trading Reputation

Greg Landsman (D-OH-1) is a first-term congressman elected in November 2022, defeating 14-term Republican incumbent Steve Chabot. Before Congress, he served on the Cincinnati City Council and worked in education policy. In the 119th Congress (2025–2027), he sits on the House Energy and Commerce Committee with subcommittee assignments covering Health, Communications and Technology, and Environment. During his first term (118th Congress), he held seats on the Small Business and Veterans' Affairs committees.

Landsman's financial disclosures paint a portrait of an active retail trader. His net worth is estimated at roughly $2.37 million, a figure drawn from public asset and income filings. What makes his trading record notable is not the size alone — it is the disconnect between his public crusade for ethics reform and his own late-filing record. He co-founded the Lowering Costs Caucus and serves as co-chair of the What Works Caucus, positioning himself as a reform-minded pragmatist. I have gone through roughly 169 of his disclosed trades, and the sharpest observation I can offer is this: nearly half of them were reported late in a single batch.

The 87-Trade Late-Filing Scandal

The defining event in Landsman's trading record is the August 2024 batch filing. On September 19, 2024, the Washington Free Beacon reported that Landsman had disclosed 87+ transactions in a single periodic transaction report, the majority of which dated back to 2023. In fact, 63 of those trades were from 2023 — 19 of them from January 2023, just days after he was sworn into office. The latest trade in that batch was from June 20, 2024, meaning the most recent late trade was still over 60 days past the STOCK Act's 45-day filing deadline.

The trades covered a wide mix of names: Nvidia (NVDA), Amazon (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), BlackRock (BLK), CrowdStrike (CRWD), Apple (AAPL), Diamondback Energy (FANG), Horizon Therapeutics, and Philip Morris (PM). Of those 87 transactions, 83 fell in the $1,000–$15,000 range and 8 in the $15,001–$50,000 range. The STOCK Act penalty is $200 per violation, which would add up to $17,400 — a nominal sum. But the political cost was higher: Landsman had run campaign ads saying, 'Members of Congress are using insider information to get rich trading stocks. That's crazy.'

His spokesperson said, 'as soon as Greg learned of the transactions, he immediately reported them.' Landsman himself called it a mistake and said it would not happen again. I cross-checked his filing dates against the STOCK Act calendar for 2023–2024, and the pattern is consistent: the August 2024 batch covered roughly 19 months of unreported trading activity.

The March 2025 Sell-Off: Portfolio Wind-Down

On March 27, 2025, Landsman and his wife executed a large-scale sell-off across most of their portfolio, unloading positions worth an estimated $379,000 to $1.44 million. The trades were filed through his wife Sarah's Traditional IRA and Rockefeller Capital Management accounts. Notable sales included $50,001–$100,000 of Microsoft (MSFT), $15,001–$50,000 each of Apple (AAPL), Alphabet (GOOGL), Nvidia (NVDA), Costco (COST), JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Procter & Gamble (PG), Salesforce (CRM), UnitedHealth Group (UNH), and Visa (V). Smaller sales of Amazon (AMZN), Disney (DIS), CrowdStrike (CRWD), Arista Networks (ANET), and Accenture (ACN) each fell in the $1,001–$15,000 range.

Landsman framed this as a proactive move toward complying with the TRUST in Congress Act, which he co-sponsored. That bill would require members of Congress to place covered investments in blind trusts. 'I am moving investments into a professionally managed ETF,' a spokesperson said. I consider this sell-off the most concrete data point in his trading record — it signals an acknowledgment that managing an individual stock portfolio while in office carries optics and compliance risks that are hard to manage at the retail level.

Portfolio Composition: What Stocks Does Greg Landsman Own?

Based on disclosed holdings, Landsman's portfolio concentrates in information technology (47 trades in that sector), with significant allocation to industrials (29 trades), healthcare (23), financials (16), and consumer staples (12). Technology names dominate: Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, Alphabet, Amazon. Energy exposure came through Diamondback Energy (FANG) and Exxon Mobil (XOM). His largest single disclosed trade was a sale of Kroger (KR) stock valued at $250,001–$500,000 on May 9, 2025 — notable because Kroger is headquartered in Cincinnati, in his own district.

The trading pattern leans toward buying on pullbacks and selling into strength, typical of a momentum-oriented retail approach. His 12-month average return of roughly 49.2% trailed the S&P 500's performance over the same period, which is a useful reality check for anyone tracking congressional portfolios — outperformance is far from guaranteed, even for an active trader on Capitol Hill.

Recent Trades by Greg Landsman

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Market Insights Coverage

50+

Congressional Portfolios Tracked

169+

Total Landsman Trades Parsed

87+

Late-Filing Alerts Flagged

~$2.74M

Total Trade Volume Tracked

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