Where can I find Nancy Pelosi's financial disclosure reports for stock transactions?

Checked on December 11, 2025
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Executive summary

You can find Nancy Pelosi’s stock transaction reports (Periodic Transaction Reports) and annual Financial Disclosure Reports on the House disclosures site and on third‑party aggregators that republish those filings; for example, a Periodic Transaction Report filed 01/17/2025 is available from the House Clerk’s public disclosure repository [1], and her annual Financial Disclosure Report (signed 05/15/2024) is also posted there [2]. Third‑party sites that collect and present these filings include LegiStorm, OpenSecrets, Quiver Quantitative, GuruFocus and market press such as Nasdaq and AInvest that summarize filings [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8].

1. Where the official filings live — the primary source

The Clerk of the U.S. House maintains the official public disclosure repository where members’ Financial Disclosure Reports and Periodic Transaction Reports (PTRs) required under the STOCK Act are posted; the repository includes individual PDFs such as a PTR for Nancy Pelosi digitally signed 01/17/2025 [1] and an annual Financial Disclosure Report filed 05/15/2024 [2]. Use the disclosures‑clerk.house.gov domain and the “public_disc” file tree to access the primary documents by year and document type [1] [2].

2. How to find and interpret transaction reports

Periodic Transaction Reports are the filings that list stock trades and option transactions reported by members; summaries and the scanned PDF copies are available in the House repository [1]. These PTRs show reported transaction dates, security names, and wide value ranges rather than exact dollar amounts; summaries in press and aggregator write‑ups often interpret the ranges and patterns but do not add transaction prices beyond what the filing discloses [8].

3. Useful third‑party aggregators and why they matter

Sites such as LegiStorm and OpenSecrets aggregate and index members’ disclosures so you can browse by filing date, year, or member, and they often make searching faster than the raw House folders [3] [4]. Quiver Quantitative, GuruFocus and Nasdaq track and visualize trading activity and sometimes estimate net worth or summarize recent trades, but they rely on the filings as their source and add interpretation or estimates [5] [6] [7].

4. Media summaries and interpretive pieces — read with context

Financial‑news pieces and niche investment sites will often summarize notable moves from Pelosi’s filings — for example, an AInvest story noted late‑2024/early‑2025 trades in technology names and a large Apple sale reported in the PTR filed 1/17/2025 [8]. Those articles provide context and takeaways but are analyses of the underlying filings rather than replacements for them; verify claims by opening the official PDF on the House site [1] [8].

5. What filings do — and what they don’t — disclose

The official filings disclose the occurrence of transactions, security names, and value ranges; they do not always provide purchase prices, exact holding amounts, or the rationale for trades, which leads third parties to estimate net worth or profit totals [1] [8]. When you see headlines about cumulative profits or net‑worth figures, note those are often computations or estimates by outlets and aggregators using the disclosed ranges, not precise, audited numbers in the filings themselves [7] [6].

6. Practical steps to retrieve Pelosi’s reports right now

Go to the House Clerk’s public disclosure repository (disclosures‑clerk.house.gov) and search or browse the financial‑pdf and ptr‑pdf folders for Nancy Pelosi’s documents (examples: PTR filed 01/17/2025, Financial Disclosure filed 05/15/2024) [1] [2]. If you prefer interface tools, use LegiStorm or OpenSecrets to pull up indexed filings by year and download the PDFs or read summaries [3] [4]. Use Quiver, GuruFocus or Nasdaq for visual timelines and media summaries, but cross‑check any numeric claims against the official PDFs [5] [6] [7].

Limitations and caveats: Official filings present ranges and disclosure formats that constrain precision; many outlets produce headline figures (net worth, cumulative profits) using assumptions not detailed in the filings, so treat aggregator estimates as interpretive rather than definitive [1] [8] [6]. Available sources do not mention any other repositories beyond the House Clerk and named aggregator sites (not found in current reporting).

Want to dive deeper?
Where are U.S. House members required to file financial disclosure reports online?
How can I search Nancy Pelosi's stock transaction filings by year or date?
What website hosts Periodic Transaction Reports (PTRs) for members of Congress?
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