A Different Kind of Trade
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) has disclosed her latest stock purchases, and they're not exactly following her usual playbook. Unlike the flurry of tech stock buys that have characterized her recent trading activity, this disclosure is notably more restrained and strategic.
On November 12, Greene made two purchases that stand out for their simplicity and timing. She bought between $15,000 and $50,000 in shares of Paychex Inc. (PAYX) and a similar amount in Automatic Data Processing Inc. (ADP).
What makes these trades interesting? Both companies were trading near their 52-week lows at the time of purchase.
Breaking From the Pattern
Greene has become known for buying technology stocks, large-cap names, and Bitcoin ETFs in recent months. Most of those purchases were disclosed in the $1,000 to $15,000 range, often with five or more trades bundled together in a single disclosure.
This latest move is different on several fronts. First, there are only two stocks involved. Second, both fall in the $40 billion to $100 billion market cap range, making them smaller than the mega-cap technology stocks she typically favors. And third, the purchase amounts are larger, hitting the $15,000 to $50,000 threshold.
The timing echoes a recent purchase of Procter & Gamble (PG) shares, also valued at $15,000 to $50,000, which similarly represented a single stock purchase trading near its 52-week low.
This marks the first time in months that Greene has disclosed buying either Paychex or ADP. Her last Paychex purchase was disclosed in May 2025, while her most recent ADP buy dates back to 2022.
The Portfolio Manager Defense
Greene has consistently maintained that she doesn't personally execute her trades. A portfolio manager handles all buying and selling decisions on her behalf.
Earlier this year, she brushed off criticism about the timing of certain stock purchases that preceded President Trump's announcement of a tariff pause, which sent markets significantly higher.
"I don't place my buys and sells," Greene explained, referencing her agreement with the portfolio manager who handles all trading decisions. "He did a great job. Guess what he did. He bought the dip. And that's what anybody who has financial sense does."
She emphasized that her portfolio manager doesn't have access to inside information, noting that everything was public and that a potential tariff pause wasn't exactly a secret.
Scrutiny and Strategy
Greene's trading activity has attracted considerable attention from the investing community. Some of her purchases, particularly in Palantir (PLTR) shares and Bitcoin ETFs, raised eyebrows due to the timing and her committee assignments.
The shift to larger purchase amounts and fewer stocks, focused on companies trading near their annual lows, suggests a possible change in strategy. Whether her portfolio manager is now targeting potentially undervalued stocks at 52-week lows, or if the disclosures of large-cap technology stocks will resume, remains to be seen.
Investors and watchdogs alike will be monitoring future disclosures closely to see if this represents a genuine strategic pivot or simply a temporary deviation from her established trading patterns.