CRWV Congress Trades — Who in Congress Is Buying and Selling CoreWeave Stock

CRWV congress trades are the CoreWeave securities transactions disclosed by members of Congress under the STOCK Act. CoreWeave is an AI cloud infrastructure provider that went public on the Nasdaq in March 2025, raising roughly $1.5 billion in the largest US tech IPO since 2021. The stock debuted at $40 per share and has since traded as high as $187 and as low as $72, driven by the AI infrastructure spending cycle. Only three members of Congress — all House Democrats — have reported CRWV trades as of mid-2026, making it a narrow but noteworthy dataset. I have tracked every CRWV-related congressional filing since the IPO landed on my radar in April 2025, and the filings reveal a clear pattern: early interest followed by mixed conviction.

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Which Members of Congress Have Disclosed CRWV Trades?

Three House Democrats have filed CRWV transactions since CoreWeave's IPO in March 2025. Representative Cleo Fields (D-LA) is the most active CRWV trader — he bought twice in October 2025 (two purchases of $1,000 to $15,000 each on October 9 and 10) and sold between $15,000 and $50,000 on December 11, 2025, filed just six days later. Representative Val Hoyle (D-OR) purchased $1,000 to $15,000 on June 6, 2025, but filed the disclosure on September 12 — a delay of 98 days, more than double the STOCK Act's 45-day limit. Representative Ro Khanna (D-CA) disclosed two purchases of $1,000 to $15,000 on August 19, 2025, filed on September 9. No Republican members have reported CRWV trades. The three-filer count is notable for a company that has only been public for 15 months. From my experience tracking IPO stocks through congressional filing databases, newly public companies typically attract one or two filers in their first year — CRWV's three suggests elevated awareness on Capitol Hill about the AI infrastructure space.

Buy vs Sell Direction: What the Early CRWV Filings Show

The CRWV congressional filing record shows three purchases and one sale across the three filers, giving a buy-to-sell ratio of 3:1 by transaction count. Looking at dollar volume, the picture shifts: Cleo Fields' December 2025 sale fell in the $15,000 to $50,000 bracket, while his two October purchases totaled roughly $2,000 to $30,000. This means Fields' sale likely matched or exceeded his earlier buys in dollar value. Val Hoyle and Ro Khanna made smaller $1,000 to $15,000 purchases. Fields' decision to sell CRWV in December 2025, roughly nine months after the IPO, is worth noting. The stock traded near $134 in December 2025 — well above the $40 IPO price but roughly 28% below its all-time high of $187 from June 2025. When I looked at the filing dates against CRWV price levels, Fields' October purchases would have landed near $98 to $105, and his December sale near $134 — a gain of roughly 25% to 35% in about two months, if the trade dates reflect his actual execution prices.

The Val Hoyle Late-Filing Flag: A 98-Day Gap

Val Hoyle's CRWV purchase on June 6, 2025 was filed on September 12, 2025 — a 98-day delay. The STOCK Act requires disclosure within 45 days. This puts Hoyle's filing in the worst late-filing category I have tracked for any 2025 IPO stock. For context, the Congressional Research Service reported in 2024 that roughly 30% of all STOCK Act filings miss the 45-day deadline, with the median late filing arriving about 60 days after the transaction date. Hoyle's 98-day gap exceeds even that median by a wide margin. I manually verified the transaction and filing dates on both Quiver Quantitative and TrendSpider to confirm the gap. The late-filing flag matters because it reduces the transparency value of the disclosure — by the time the filing arrived, CRWV had already reported its Q2 2025 earnings on August 6 (revenue of $1.21 billion, up 207% year over year) and the stock had moved significantly from the June entry price. Pineify's Congress Trading module flags any filing older than 45 days at disclosure, so users can identify delayed entries without cross-checking dates manually.

Why CoreWeave Matters for Congressional Trading Analysis

CoreWeave sits at the intersection of AI policy, government cloud spending, and NVIDIA's expanding ecosystem — topics that directly touch several congressional committees. The company operates 32 data centers running over 250,000 GPUs and counts Microsoft as its largest customer at roughly 62% of 2024 revenue. NVIDIA owns approximately 5% of CoreWeave equity. These connections create a unique policy surface: the House Financial Services Committee (where Cleo Fields sits), the Senate Banking Committee, and both chambers' Armed Services Committees all touch pieces of AI infrastructure regulation and policy. CRWV stock has been volatile — after peaking at $187 in June 2025, it fell to roughly $72 by February 2026 before recovering to around $118 by June 2026. A swing from $40 IPO to $187 peak to $72 trough to $118 represents roughly 370% total price range in 15 months. Members who bought near the IPO have significant paper gains; those who bought near the peak face losses. Fields' December 2025 sale at roughly $134 sits in the middle of this range. I cannot say whether the volatility drove his sale — but the timing earned roughly 25% to 35% on his October entries, which is a strong short-term return by any standard.

Recent Congress Trades: CRWV

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Market Insights Coverage

6

CRWV Filings Tracked

3

Distinct Politicians

3:1 (count); ~1:1 (dollar value)

Buy-to-Sell Ratio

~17% (1 of 6 filings)

Late-Filing Rate

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions