From Silicon Valley to Snack Aisle
If you've been tracking congressional stock trades this year, here's an interesting pivot: Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) just made his first stock purchases of 2025, and he's apparently more interested in chocolate bars and soft drinks than artificial intelligence chips.
On November 21, Whitehouse disclosed three new stock purchases. He bought $1,000 to $15,000 worth of shares in Hershey Co (HSY), the same range in Coca-Cola Co (KO), and an identical amount in Guardant Health (GH), a healthcare diagnostics company.
The timing is notable because these are his first buys of the year, coming just ahead of the holiday season for the two food and beverage giants. Guardant Health and Hershey represent entirely new holdings for the senator over the past three years. Coca-Cola, though, isn't a stranger to his portfolio. He previously picked up shares in October 2024 and December 2023.
The Magnificent Seven Exodus
What makes these purchases particularly interesting is what came before them. Whitehouse has spent much of 2024 and early 2025 systematically exiting positions in the so-called Magnificent Seven tech stocks.
He sold Apple Inc. (AAPL) shares twice, in September and April. His NVIDIA Corp (NVDA) sales were even more frequent, with transactions in October, September, July, April, and January. He also dumped Microsoft Corp (MSFT) shares in September.
So we're looking at someone who spent months rotating out of high-flying tech and then turned around to buy consumer staples and a healthcare stock. Whether that reflects market timing, portfolio rebalancing, or just personal preference is anyone's guess.
Not Exactly Must-See Trading
Here's the thing about Whitehouse's trades: they don't typically generate the same buzz as other members of Congress. His transactions are relatively modest, and he doesn't sit on the kinds of committees that make his trades look particularly prescient or problematic.
Compare that to the attention surrounding members whose trades consistently seem to align with upcoming policy decisions or market moves, and you'll understand why these purchases aren't exactly lighting up social media.
Speaking of attention-grabbing congressional traders, Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif) is retiring in 2026. For retail investors who've made a hobby of tracking congressional stock activity—particularly Pelosi's, given her husband's background as a venture capitalist—that means potentially finding new members to follow. The question is whether anyone else will demonstrate the same uncanny ability to outperform the market that the former Speaker of the House has shown over the years.
For now, Whitehouse's pivot from tech to consumer goods offers a modest data point in the ongoing saga of congressional stock trading, even if it's not the most dramatic one you'll see this year.