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.
Who Is Pete Sessions? Background and Trading Reputation
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
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
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
Loading live data...
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