1 U.S. lawmaker has disclosed 2 Fidelity Select Health Care trades under the STOCK Act — 1 buy and 1 sell in 2020. Congress has been evenly split of FIDSX, and their disclosed buys are up 107.9% versus the latest close.
*Notional-weighted price return on lawmakers' disclosed buys of FIDSX, marked to the latest close — per-share (share counts aren't disclosed).
| Date | Member | Type | Amount | Est. price | Latest close | Return |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020-06-11 | Hon. Alan S. Lowenthal | SELL | $1K–$15K | $7.81 | $16.24 2026-06-29 | 0.0% rt |
| 2020-06-11 | Hon. Alan S. Lowenthal | BUY | $1K–$15K | $7.81 | $16.24 2026-06-29 | +107.9% |
Return: buys marked to the latest close (open); sells tagged rt are realized round-trips vs a prior disclosed buy; exit = timing (stock move after the sale, seller's perspective).
1 member of the U.S. House and Senate has disclosed Fidelity Select Health Care transactions under the STOCK Act — 1 purchase and 1 sale. The full member-by-member breakdown, with dates and dollar ranges, is in the table above.
Notional-weighted, lawmakers' disclosed FIDSX buys are up 107.9% versus the latest close of $16.24. Each trade's own return — and realized round-trips on matched sells — is in the Return column.
Yes. Under the 2012 STOCK Act, members of Congress may buy and sell individual stocks but must publicly disclose each transaction within 45 days. Bargo surfaces those filings so you can see who traded FIDSX and how it performed.