Marjorie Taylor Greene Stock Trades — Congressional Portfolio Tracker
Marjorie Taylor Greene is a Republican U.S. Representative for Georgia's 14th congressional district whose stock trades disclosed under the STOCK Act offer a public window into how a high-profile House committee member allocates a personal portfolio spanning tech stocks, Bitcoin ETFs, and large-cap index funds.
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Who Is Marjorie Taylor Greene?
Marjorie Taylor Greene has represented Georgia's 14th district since 2021. She serves on the House Oversight and Accountability Committee and the House Homeland Security Committee, giving her visibility into federal regulatory oversight and national security policy — areas that overlap with the companies whose stock she trades.
Her net worth is estimated at approximately $22–25 million, placing her among the wealthier members of Congress. Unlike some colleagues who place assets in blind trusts, Greene's disclosed portfolio shows active management across equities, ETFs, and a Bitcoin trust. Data from Quiver Quantitative suggests her STOCK Act filings collectively account for up to $15.4 million in parsed trade volume through early 2026.
Her net worth is estimated at approximately $22–25 million, placing her among the wealthier members of Congress. Unlike some colleagues who place assets in blind trusts, Greene's disclosed portfolio shows active management across equities, ETFs, and a Bitcoin trust. Data from Quiver Quantitative suggests her STOCK Act filings collectively account for up to $15.4 million in parsed trade volume through early 2026.
Trading Style and Portfolio Allocation
Greene's disclosed trades skew heavily toward large-cap technology and broad-market ETFs. Her largest known positions include the Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ) and SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY), which together anchor the equity portion of her portfolio. Beyond index funds, she has traded individual names including Apple (AAPL), Palantir (PLTR), Snowflake (SNOW), and Costco (COST).
In a public statement in 2023, Greene claimed some reported holdings belonged to her son's account, not her own, though STOCK Act filings list transactions under her name as the reporting individual. This distinction matters for anyone tracking her trading patterns: the disclosed data may overstate her personal trading frequency. I have followed this discrepancy since 2022, and the filings remain under her individual name — the system does not distinguish household vs. personal trades at the point of disclosure.
In a public statement in 2023, Greene claimed some reported holdings belonged to her son's account, not her own, though STOCK Act filings list transactions under her name as the reporting individual. This distinction matters for anyone tracking her trading patterns: the disclosed data may overstate her personal trading frequency. I have followed this discrepancy since 2022, and the filings remain under her individual name — the system does not distinguish household vs. personal trades at the point of disclosure.
Recent Notable Disclosed Trades
Trades verified against public STOCK Act filings through early 2026. Dollar amounts are reported in mandatory disclosure ranges.
Several of Greene's filings have stood out for their timing and returns:
Snowflake (SNOW) — June 17, 2025: Purchased $1,001–$15,000 in SNOW, a cloud data platform stock that had pulled back from its 2024 highs.
Tractor Supply (TSCO) — June 17, 2025: Purchased $1,001–$15,000 on the same day as the SNOW buy, suggesting a coordinated batch of trades.
iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) — March 2025: Bought the spot Bitcoin ETF at approximately $1,001–$15,000. IBIT subsequently rose roughly 43% from her entry through May 2026.
Impinj (PI) — prior year: Her disclosed PI purchase delivered an estimated 131% gain from cost basis through mid-2026, one of the stronger returns I have seen from a single congressional trade in the past three years.
"Liberation Day" buys — April 2025: Greene purchased Lululemon (LULU), Dell (DELL), and Apple (AAPL) after Trump's tariff announcement but before the 90-day pause was disclosed. The timing prompted an insider trading inquiry from Representative Gregorio Casar.
All dollar ranges come from STOCK Act periodic transaction reports. Actual amounts are not publicly disclosed beyond these broad ranges.
Snowflake (SNOW) — June 17, 2025: Purchased $1,001–$15,000 in SNOW, a cloud data platform stock that had pulled back from its 2024 highs.
Tractor Supply (TSCO) — June 17, 2025: Purchased $1,001–$15,000 on the same day as the SNOW buy, suggesting a coordinated batch of trades.
iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) — March 2025: Bought the spot Bitcoin ETF at approximately $1,001–$15,000. IBIT subsequently rose roughly 43% from her entry through May 2026.
Impinj (PI) — prior year: Her disclosed PI purchase delivered an estimated 131% gain from cost basis through mid-2026, one of the stronger returns I have seen from a single congressional trade in the past three years.
"Liberation Day" buys — April 2025: Greene purchased Lululemon (LULU), Dell (DELL), and Apple (AAPL) after Trump's tariff announcement but before the 90-day pause was disclosed. The timing prompted an insider trading inquiry from Representative Gregorio Casar.
All dollar ranges come from STOCK Act periodic transaction reports. Actual amounts are not publicly disclosed beyond these broad ranges.
Late Filing Alerts and Compliance
The STOCK Act requires trades to be filed within 45 days. Greene's filing history shows a mix of timely reports and late submissions. I have reviewed her filing timeline and identified several transactions filed past the 45-day window, including portions of the LVV (private fund) holdings that appeared in periodic transaction reports months after the trade date.
Current data from congressional trade trackers flags late filings by comparing report dates against transaction dates — a gap exceeding 45 days triggers a late-filing alert. While Greene's late-filing rate is lower than some high-volume traders in Congress, the pattern underscores a broader compliance issue across the House. The STOCK Act carries no enforcement mechanism beyond public disclosure, so investors relying on these filings for timing signals should account for the delay.
Current data from congressional trade trackers flags late filings by comparing report dates against transaction dates — a gap exceeding 45 days triggers a late-filing alert. While Greene's late-filing rate is lower than some high-volume traders in Congress, the pattern underscores a broader compliance issue across the House. The STOCK Act carries no enforcement mechanism beyond public disclosure, so investors relying on these filings for timing signals should account for the delay.
Recent Trades by Marjorie Taylor Greene
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Market Insights Coverage
50+
Congressional Portfolios Tracked
150+
Total MTG Trades Parsed
12
Late-Filing Alerts Flagged
24h
Data Freshness
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