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Congress Trades Filed Late June 2026: McCormick Municipal Bonds and Senate Batches

ProBors shows 12 late-June congressional filings—McCormick municipal bond batches, Moran tech trades, Pelosi options. Snapshot for disclosure researchers.

Congressional stock trades filed in the last week of June 2026 center on three Senate-heavy batches and a pair of House option lines. As of June 28, 2026, ProBors shows 12 deduplicated disclosure rows with filing dates between June 24 and June 26—six purchases and six sales across the House and Senate. Sen. David McCormick accounts for eight of those rows, mostly municipal bond activity filed on June 26 with trade dates stretching back to late May. Filing lag in this window runs from 8 days on the freshest McCormick purchase to 31 days on several May 26 sales. This is research context, not investment advice.

Snapshot summary

ProBors sorts congressional disclosures by filing date. In the June 24–26 filing window:

  • 12 rows after deduplication (identical politician, ticker, type, trade date, filing date, amount, and chamber removed)
  • 3 politicians filed in this window: McCormick (Senate), Jerry Moran (Senate), and Nancy Pelosi (House)
  • Chamber split: 10 Senate rows, 2 House rows
  • Transaction mix: 6 purchases, 6 sales
  • Filing lag: 8-day minimum (McCormick municipal purchase traded June 18, filed June 26), 31-day maximum, 30-day median
  • Asset types: municipal securities dominate the McCormick batch; Moran filed common-stock lines; Pelosi filed call-option purchases

The late-June wave looks different from the mid-June House PTR sweep covered in Congress trades filed mid-June 2026. This week is Senate-weighted, bond-heavy, and spread across three filing dates rather than one same-day House dump.

Recent disclosures worth a closer look

The table below shows deduplicated rows from ProBors as of June 28, 2026. Lag is calendar days between transaction date and filing date as reported in each disclosure. Rows without a listed ticker use the security description from the filing.

PoliticianChamberTicker / assetTypeTradedFiledLagAmount rangeSignal
David McCormickSenateMunicipal (Allegheny Cnty PA)PurchaseJune 18, 2026June 26, 20268 days$250,001–$500,000Normal
David McCormickSenateMunicipal (Pennsylvania ST GO)SaleMay 26, 2026June 26, 202631 days$500,001–$1,000,000Normal
David McCormickSenateMunicipal (New Glarus WI Sch Dist)SaleMay 26, 2026June 26, 202631 days$250,001–$500,000Normal
Jerry MoranSenateGOOGSaleMay 27, 2026June 25, 202629 days$1,001–$15,000Worth watching
Jerry MoranSenateBRK.BPurchaseMay 27, 2026June 25, 202629 days$1,001–$15,000Normal
Nancy PelosiHouseINTC (call options)PurchaseMay 29, 2026June 24, 202626 days$1,000,001–$5,000,000Worth watching
Nancy PelosiHouseUBER (call options)PurchaseMay 29, 2026June 24, 202626 days$500,001–$1,000,000Normal

How to read this without overfitting:

  • McCormick's June 26 batch mixes a relatively timely municipal purchase (8-day lag) with five municipal sales all tied to May 26 trade dates and filed a month later. That pattern reads like a periodic Senate report landing several bond lines at once—not a single reactive trade. ProBors scored those rows Normal despite cluster flags because municipal securities lack equity tickers and the amounts sit in standard brackets.
  • Moran's pair is a small-dollar tech sale (GOOG) alongside a Berkshire purchase (BRK.B) on the same trade date. The GOOG line carries a Worth watching signal partly because it is the first disclosed activity in that ticker for this member.
  • Pelosi's option lines filed June 24 are already covered in depth in Pelosi Intel and Uber call options filing. They appear here because they are part of this week's filing calendar, not because the underlying trades are new.

Filing lag in plain language

STOCK Act disclosures are periodic reports, not live trade feeds. In this late-June snapshot:

  • Fastest: McCormick's Allegheny County municipal purchase at 8-day lag—trade June 18, filed June 26
  • Typical Senate delay this batch: 29–31 days for Moran and most McCormick municipal sales
  • House options: Pelosi rows at 26-day lag (May 29 trade, June 24 filing)

When a headline says a senator "just disclosed" a trade, check both dates. A sale filed on June 26 may reflect a May 26 transaction. For the rules behind that gap, see STOCK Act filing delay explained.

How to research this week's filings on ProBors

  1. Open Congressional trades and sort by filing date descending to mirror this snapshot.
  2. Filter by Senate when you want batches like McCormick's municipal lines or Moran's May 27 pair.
  3. Use the politician search to open a member profile and compare trade dates across multiple filings in one sitting.
  4. For rows without a ticker, read the security description in the detail view—municipal bonds often appear as -- in ticker fields.
  5. Cross-check any high-signal row against the original PTR or Senate eFD PDF before citing it in notes or journalism.

For chamber-specific workflows, see the Senate stock trading tracker and House stock trading tracker guides.

What this does not prove

This late-June filing wave does not show:

  • That McCormick's municipal bond sales predict a move in any equity index
  • That Moran's small GOOG sale reflects non-public information about Alphabet
  • Exact dollar amounts—every row uses statutory brackets, not precise trade values
  • Real-time congressional activity; several Senate rows reflect May transactions filed in late June
  • That municipal bond disclosures are directly comparable to common-stock lines in signal scoring

Congressional disclosure is a lagging, incomplete window into politician portfolios. Use it for research context and source verification, not as a trading signal.

FAQ

Why is this week's batch so Senate-heavy?

Filing calendars vary by member and reporting period. A week dominated by Senate periodic reports does not mean the House was inactive—it often means House PTRs landed on a different calendar window. Compare with the mid-June House-heavy batch for contrast.

How should I read municipal bond rows with no ticker?

Municipal securities in Senate disclosures frequently lack an equity ticker. Use the security name, coupon, and maturity from the filing. ProBors preserves those fields in the stock description column.

What does "Worth watching" mean on Moran's GOOG sale?

ProBors signal scores weigh factors such as first-time ticker activity, transaction type, size bracket, and post-trade price context. Worth watching helps triage—it does not certify intent or future performance. See how ProBors trade signal scores work.

Are Pelosi's INTC and UBER lines new information this week?

The trades occurred May 29; the filing became public June 24. If you already read the dedicated Pelosi options breakdown, this week's value is calendar context—not a new transaction.

How often should I refresh a weekly snapshot like this?

Filing batches arrive unevenly. A weekly review is reasonable for monitoring; daily checks matter more when you track specific politicians or tickers on a watchlist.

Track this week's congressional filings

Sort House and Senate disclosures by filing date, signal score, and ticker on ProBors.

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Sources

Sources & methodology

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ProBors uses public disclosure records, SEC filings, House and Senate financial disclosure portals, market data, and in-product workflow checks. Articles are written as research education, not investment advice.