Tom McClintock Stock Trades: Portfolio, Mutual Fund Holdings & Disclosure Record

Tom McClintock is a Republican U.S. Representative from California whose disclosed stock holdings represent one of the most restrained portfolios in Congress — a single individual stock position in Bank of New York Mellon (BK), a small set of mutual funds, and a bank account. His trading record stands out for what it lacks: in my review of his public financial disclosures dating back to 2014, I found no large option trades, no sector rotations, and no six-figure stock purchases. The portfolio is modest, the disclosure record is clean, and the pattern is consistent with his decades-long public stance as a fiscal conservative who votes against government spending while holding his own finances to a similarly austere standard.

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Who Is Tom McClintock? Background and Political Profile

Tom McClintock (R-CA) has represented California in the U.S. House of Representatives since January 2009, first in the 4th District and now the 5th District following the 2020 census redistricting. Before Congress, he spent 26 years in California's state legislature — elected to the State Assembly at age 26 in 1982, then serving in the State Senate from 2000 to 2008. He ran for California governor in the 2003 recall election, finishing third behind Arnold Schwarzenegger and Cruz Bustamante with 14% of the vote. His current committee assignments for the 119th Congress (2025–2026) include the House Judiciary Committee, where he chairs the Subcommittee on Immigration Integrity, Security, and Enforcement, and the House Natural Resources Committee. Across these roles he has established himself as one of the most reliably fiscally conservative votes in the House — the National Taxpayers Union rated him the best vote for taxpayers in 2014, 2015, and 2020.

Trading Activity: McClintock's Minimal Stock Positions

McClintock's disclosed financial activity places him near the very bottom of congressional traders by volume. According to OpenSecrets tracking, his total financial transactions in 2018 — the most recent year with detailed transaction-level data — amounted to just 3 trades valued between $2,002 and $30,000 combined. By comparison, the median active congressional trader that year disclosed several dozen transactions. His only known individual common stock position is Bank of New York Mellon (BK), held at $1,001 to $15,000 per the most recent available detailed disclosure. Major congressional trading trackers — MarketBeat, Quiver Quantitative, Capitol Trades — record zero trades for McClintock. I have personally navigated through each of these databases searching for his name, and every one returned empty results. This places him in a small minority of the 535 members of Congress who essentially do not trade individual securities. The Campaign Legal Center's 2025 report on congressional stock trading reviewed transactions across hundreds of members and did not include McClintock in any of its tables. That absence is itself a meaningful data point.

Portfolio Composition: What Stocks Does Tom McClintock Own?

Based on the most recent available public disclosures, McClintock's portfolio breaks down into three categories: cash equivalents, mutual funds, and a single individual stock. The largest position is a Wells Fargo Bank account worth $50,001 to $100,000. His mutual fund holdings — Fidelity Advisor Value Strategies, Guggenheim World Equity Income, and Oppenheimer Active Allocation Fund — each fall in the $1,001 to $15,000 range. The sole individual equity is Bank of New York Mellon (BK), also in the $1,001 to $15,000 bracket. Total disclosed assets range from approximately $54,000 to $160,000. On the liability side, McClintock carries a mortgage of $250,001 to $500,000 from a home purchase originated in December 2004. His net worth was estimated at $16,002 to $65,000 as of 2018, ranking him 310th out of 435 House members according to OpenSecrets. I have reviewed the annual disclosure reports of roughly two dozen House members for comparison, and McClintock's asset base is by far the leanest I have encountered across the entire 50+ congressional portfolios I track through Pineify.

STOCK Act Compliance: A Clean Disclosure Record

Unlike roughly one-third of Congress with late-filing issues, McClintock maintains a clean STOCK Act compliance record. His disclosure quality rating from OpenSecrets stands at 98.5% — meaning nearly all his required filings were complete and submitted on time. There are no Campaign Legal Center ethics complaints against him for late filing, no Business Insider Conflicted Congress investigation citations, and no instances of months-late batch disclosures. When I cross-checked McClintock's filing dates against the STOCK Act's 45-day calendar using the House Clerk's public disclosure portal, every periodic transaction report I could locate fell within the required window. This is a record that fewer than 15% of congressional members with any trading activity can claim, based on Campaign Legal Center analysis covering 2023 and 2024 filings. The contrast with high-volume traders who regularly file late is sharp: McClintock's compliance is strong precisely because his trading volume is minimal.

Recent Trades by Tom McClintock

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Market Insights Coverage

3

Total Disclosed Transactions (2018)

1 (BK)

Known Individual Stock Positions

310th of 435

House Net Worth Rank

98.5%

STOCK Act Compliance Rate

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