Pete Sessions Stock Trades — Portfolio Tracker & Recent Disclosures

Pete Sessions stock trades are the congressional transaction disclosures filed under the STOCK Act by the Republican U.S. Representative for Texas's 17th district. A 20-year House veteran who previously chaired the Rules Committee from 2013 to 2019, Sessions has disclosed roughly 78 stock and bond trades totaling approximately $1.25 million since 2021, with a 12-month trailing return around 80.6% — well above the S&P 500's comparable gain during the same period. His current committee assignments on Financial Services and Oversight and Government Reform, where he chairs the Government Operations Subcommittee, place him in a position to oversee the same regulatory system his trades touch. I have monitored his filings since early 2024, and the clearest pattern is a deliberate rotation out of consumer staples into AI-adjacent tech names like Nvidia and Microsoft.

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Who Is Pete Sessions? Background and Trading Reputation

Pete Sessions is a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives, currently representing Texas's 17th congressional district. First elected in 1997 (after a brief 2019–2021 gap following redistricting), he is one of the longer-serving current House members. He chaired the House Rules Committee from 2013 through 2019, controlling what legislation reaches the floor. Today he sits on the Financial Services Committee and the Oversight and Government Reform Committee, where he chairs the Government Operations Subcommittee.

His net worth is estimated at roughly $9.8 million by Quiver Quantitative, with approximately $3.3 million in publicly tracked assets. That places him in the top 100 wealthiest members of Congress, though far below the chamber's multimillionaire leadership. Sessions has disclosed 78 total trades with a combined volume around $1.25 million — a moderate trading pace relative to colleagues like Nancy Pelosi or Tommy Tuberville. One thing I noticed when I first started tracking Sessions in early 2024 was the contrast: his portfolio turnover is deliberate, with an average holding period that appears longer than most active congressional traders I follow.

Notable Disclosed Trades: Nvidia, Microsoft, and the Shift from Staples

Sessions' trading record shows a clear pivot away from consumer defensive stocks and into technology over the past two years. His Nvidia (NVDA) trades stand out. In May 2024, he sold NVDA in the $50,000–$100,000 range — his single largest disclosed stock transaction — then bought back in twice, in September 2024 and November 2024, both in the $1,001–$15,000 range. Those repurchases came at prices below $120, right before NVDA's next leg higher past $200.

His Microsoft (MSFT) purchases followed a similar rhythm: $1,001–$15,000 buys in February 2024, September 2024, and December 2024. He sold his Altria (MO) position in September 2024, also $1,001–$15,000, exiting a name he held through the Trust One account. In a single day, June 12, 2025, he sold Danaher (DHR) in the $50,000–$100,000 range and Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) between $15,001–$50,000 — both healthcare positions cleared on the same day through Trust One. I cross-checked those June 12 sales against the filing dates, and they were reported within the 45-day window, though DHR and JNJ both traded higher post-sale.

Late Filing Alerts: A Recurring STOCK Act Issue

The STOCK Act requires members to file transaction reports within 45 days. Sessions has a documented history of late filings. A 2022 Business Insider investigation found that Sessions failed to properly disclose seven stock trades from 2021 totaling up to $105,000 in value. His most tardy filing from that batch — a Microsoft purchase — arrived roughly four months late. A separate Pelosi Tracker audit of his May 2014 filings showed a compliance rate of just 13% (1 of 8 transactions within the 45-day window), with the latest trade filed 278 days after the transaction date.

Pineify flags any filing that exceeds the 45-day limit with a visible late-filing badge. In Sessions' case, the late-filing pattern is sporadic rather than systematic — some batches are timely, others miss the mark by months. I checked his 2024–2025 filing timeline against the 45-day rule and found a mix of on-time reports and late submissions, consistent with the broader congressional pattern where roughly 30% of filings across both parties miss the deadline according to Campaign Legal Center data.

Recent Trades by Pete Sessions

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Market Insights Coverage

50+

Congressional Portfolios Tracked

78+

Total Sessions Trades Parsed

7+

Late-Filing Alerts Flagged

Financial Services

Committee Oversight Overlap

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions