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Sen. Katie Britt’s Late Disclosures: Nvidia Up 73% — Retail Investors Couldn’t Follow Trades

Sen. Katie Britt’s Late Disclosures: Nvidia Up 73% — Retail Investors Couldn’t Follow Trades

Senator Katie Britt disclosed multiple stock trades that Benzinga’s records show are dated April and Nov. 2025. Social trackers and analytics firms flagged the filings as months late, potentially breaching the STOCK Act’s 45-day disclosure rule. Benzinga’s calculations show double-digit gains for Apple, Amazon, Alphabet and Nvidia between the reported buy and sell dates, but the delayed disclosures prevented retail investors from following those trades in real time. Britt’s role on the Senate Banking Committee and the presence of spouse-reported trades have intensified scrutiny.

Senator Katie Britt (R-Ala.) recently disclosed a series of stock transactions that Benzinga’s Government Trades records list with transaction dates in April 2025 and Nov. 7, 2025. Social trackers and analytic firms flagged the filings as months late, raising potential STOCK Act timing violations and renewed questions about conflicts of interest given Britt’s role on the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Development Committee.

What The Filings Show

According to Benzinga’s compilation and social media trackers such as PelosiTracker and Quiver Quantitative, the disclosures include multiple purchases in mid- to late-April 2025 and corresponding sales listed on Nov. 7, 2025. Many of the filings were not publicly disclosed until January 2026.

Reported Transactions (Amounts Reported In $1,000–$15,000 Bracket)

  • April 14, 2025 — Bought Apple Inc. (AAPL); additional buy listed April 30, 2025; sale listed Nov. 7, 2025
  • April 14, 2025 — Bought Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN); additional buy April 30, 2025; sold Nov. 7, 2025
  • April 14, 2025 — Bought Alphabet (GOOG); sold Nov. 7, 2025
  • April 14, 2025 — Bought NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA); additional buy April 30, 2025; sold Nov. 7, 2025
  • April 14, 2025 — Bought UnitedHealth Group (UNH); sale listed April 30, 2025
  • April 14, 2025 — Bought Visa Inc. (V); sold Nov. 7, 2025
  • April 14, 2025 — Bought ExxonMobil (XOM); sold April 30, 2025
  • April purchases (no sale date listed): EOG Resources (EOG), JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Microsoft (MSFT), UPS (UPS), Walmart (WMT)

Timing, Gains And Compliance Concerns

Under the STOCK Act, members of Congress and their spouses must disclose securities transactions over $1,000 within 45 days of the transaction date. Observers say many of the filings associated with Senator Britt were submitted well past that window. Social posts noted large price moves between the reported purchase and sale dates — for example, trackers pointed to steep gains in names such as Nvidia and Alphabet.

Benzinga's Calculations: Using the highest prices on the reported purchase and sale dates, Benzinga calculated the following gains: Apple +27.9%, Amazon +32.3%, Alphabet +73.4%, Nvidia +72.9%.

Separately, some analytics firms on social media reported different gain estimates (for example, Quiver Quantitative flagged a larger percentage for Alphabet based on their reference prices). Discrepancies reflect differences in which intraday prices or date ranges are used for calculation.

Spouse Trades And Committee Conflict Questions

The filings list several trades as executed by a spouse, which would still be subject to the STOCK Act’s disclosure timing rules. Britt’s position on the Senate Banking Committee — and the reported purchase of JPMorgan stock — has attracted scrutiny from civic watchdogs and market observers who monitor potential overlaps between lawmakers’ official responsibilities and private investments.

Benzinga reached out to Senator Britt for comment. The outlet says it will continue to monitor congressional filings and report any trades that raise questions about timing, conflicts of interest or compliance with disclosure rules.

Bottom Line: The filings underscore growing public interest in congressional trading and in whether disclosure rules are being followed in practice. Late filings mean retail investors could not replicate many of these positions while they were active.

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