Quiver Quantitative Launches Dashboard to Track President Trump's Stock Trades
Quiver Quantitative, the alternative data platform known for tracking congressional stock trades, has extended its political-finance coverage to the Oval Office with the launch of its Donald Trump Stock Trade Tracker - a dedicated dashboard aggregating the president's disclosures alongside excess-return analytics for each reported position.
On May 14, 2026, the U.S. Office of Government Ethics released two OGE Form 278-T reports showing that Trump's portfolio executed more than 3,600 individual securities transactions in the first quarter of 2026 alone roughly 58 trades per market day. The cumulative disclosed value of those trades ranged between $220 million and $750 million, reflecting the broad valuation bands that federal ethics rules permit rather than exact dollar figures. The filing logs 2,345 purchases and 1,296 sales across 90 days.
Big-tech names dominated the largest individual positions. Large purchases - each valued between $1 million and $5 million - included Nvidia, Apple, and an S&P 500 index fund, while large sales of between $5 million and $25 million each were recorded in Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta. Other names appearing in significant purchases included Oracle, Broadcom, Bank of America, and Goldman Sachs.
The White House maintains that the president's assets are not managed by the president himself.
Quiver's dashboard goes beyond raw disclosure data by computing an excess return metric for each reported transaction - measuring how a stock has performed relative to the broader market since the trade date. Among the standout figures in the current dataset: Dell Technologies (DELL), purchased in February 2026, carries an estimated excess return of over 223%, while SanDisk (SNDK) shows a roughly 415% excess return following a January purchase.
The disclosure has reignited the congressional debate over executive-branch stock trading. The bipartisan "Restore Trust in Congress Act," introduced in September 2025 by Rep. Chip Roy (R) and Rep. Seth Magaziner (D), would ban members of Congress, their spouses, and dependents from holding or trading individual stocks. A companion Senate bill was introduced in January 2026 by Senators Ashley Moody (R) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D), and the House version has attracted more than 120 co-sponsors. A separate debate remains unresolved over whether any such ban should extend to the president.
Quiver's tracker joins its existing suite of political-finance dashboards - covering congressional trading, election fundraising, and lobbying data - and is accessible via both the web interface and the Quiver API for programmatic analysis.