Members of Congress sit on the committees that regulate the industries they invest in. They receive classified briefings. Under the STOCK Act they have 45 days to disclose what they bought or sold.
By the time most people find out, the position is closed. The gain is banked. The 45-day window wasn't an oversight in the law. It was a feature.
We built a system that reads every filing, scores it for committee conflicts, options activity, and legislation timing, and tells you what happened — in plain English, the day it happens. Free.
All 535 members. Every STOCK Act filing. Scored for committee conflicts, disclosure delay, and options flow correlation. Free tier shows today's 3 most notable disclosures in full — amounts, delays, Norm's read. The rest is Intel.
Every Friday before market open. Congressional trades with amounts and committee conflicts. Dark pool positioning. Market regime. Signal activity. What Norm makes of all of it — in plain English, without the usual condescension.
The pipeline generates thousands of data points weekly. You get the distilled version. Free. No catch. We'd rather prove we know what we're talking about before asking for your money.
"A senator bought $500,000 in defense stock. Three days later his committee voted on a defense bill. He waited 41 days to tell you. This is legal. I didn't say it was surprising. I said it was legal."
"40% of US equity volume trades somewhere you can't see it. The institutions know this. They're comfortable with that arrangement. We found it interesting."
"The market did something today. Norm read the public record. The report explains what, why, and what it means for tomorrow. The disclaimer explains that this is not financial advice. Both things are true."