When Questionable Timing Meets Bad Returns
Here's an interesting twist on the usual congressional trading controversy: Louisiana Rep. Cleo Fields bought Netflix Inc. (NFLX) shares just weeks before the streaming company dropped news of an $82.7 billion buyout offer for Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) media assets. The timing looks eyebrow-raising at first glance, but there's a catch—he's actually losing money on the deal.
According to congressional trading disclosures, Fields made two separate Netflix purchases on November 20, each valued between $100,000 and $250,000. That means the congressman potentially scooped up half a million dollars worth of Netflix stock before the Warner Bros. acquisition became public knowledge.
Now, if you're thinking this smells like suspiciously well-timed insider trading, consider this: if Fields actually had inside information, you'd think he would've bet on Warner Bros. Discovery instead. After all, Warner Bros. shares have jumped thanks to competing interest from Netflix and Paramount Skydance Corp. (PSKY), which countered with an even higher bid for the media company.
The Numbers Tell a Different Story
Netflix stock traded between $105.39 and $111.10 on November 20 when Fields made his purchases. Today, shares sit at $94.09. Do the math and Fields is currently underwater by somewhere between 10.7% and 15.3% on his latest Netflix buys. Not exactly the return you'd expect from someone supposedly trading on inside information.
The market hasn't exactly celebrated Netflix's aggressive expansion move, and Fields is feeling that pain in his portfolio right now.
A Pattern of Big Tech Bets
Fields has become one of the busiest traders in Congress this year, at least measured by dollar volume. The Louisiana Democrat has disclosed millions in purchases of so-called Magnificent Seven tech stocks throughout 2025.
His Netflix obsession actually started earlier than November. Previous disclosures show three additional Netflix purchases: one on October 31 and two more on November 3, each in the $100,000 to $250,000 range. That's a lot of confidence in the streaming giant.
So while the November 20 timing might grab attention given what happened next with the Warner Bros. announcement, Fields had already established a clear pattern of bullish Netflix bets. The more recent purchases look less like strategic insider moves and more like a continuation of an existing investment thesis—one that, at least for now, isn't working out particularly well.
Sometimes the story behind congressional stock trades is more complicated than it appears. And sometimes, even timing that looks suspicious ends up just being bad timing instead.




