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Quantellect · Congress · Trade Detail
NYSE: IBMInternational Business Machines
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Frank A. LoBiondo sold International Business Machines (NYSE: IBM)

Frank A. LoBiondo (R-NJ), a U.S. Representative, has disclosed 1 trade in International Business Machines (IBM) since 2018, a single sale, worth an estimated $8K in disclosed volume (the midpoint of the dollar ranges members report, not exact amounts).

The trade highlighted here is a sale: Frank A. LoBiondo sold $1,001 - $15,000 of International Business Machines (NYSE: IBM) on December 10, 2018. Since that trade, IBM is up +157.61% against the S&P 500 up +219.30%, an outperformance of -61.69%.

Data updated

IBM trades
1
Disclosed Vol
$8K
Buys
0
0%
Sells
1
100%
Buy / Sell
0.00
ratio
First → Last
2018

Frank A. LoBiondo's IBM trades vs the price

IBM is up +157.61% since Frank A. LoBiondo sold on December 10, 2018, versus +219.30% for the S&P 500.

Performance since this trade

Price change since trade
+157.61%
S&P 500 change since trade
+219.30%
Outperformance vs S&P 500
-61.69%

All Frank A. LoBiondo IBM trades

TradedTypeSizeReturnEst. profit
December 10, 2018SELL$84.26+157.61%

Estimated profit is shown for buys only, marked to the latest close. It is an estimate and does not net later sells, taxes, or fees.

Frank A. LoBiondo & IBM trading FAQ

Is it legal for Frank A. LoBiondo to trade International Business Machines (IBM) stock?

Yes. Members of Congress are allowed to trade individual stocks, including International Business Machines (IBM), but the STOCK Act of 2012 requires them to publicly disclose each transaction within 45 days. Quantellect tracks those disclosures; this page does not imply the trade was improper.

When did Frank A. LoBiondo sell IBM?

Frank A. LoBiondo disclosed a sale of $1,001 - $15,000 of International Business Machines (IBM) on December 10, 2018, according to public STOCK Act filings.

How has IBM performed since Frank A. LoBiondo's trade?

Since Frank A. LoBiondo sold IBM on December 10, 2018, the stock is up +157.61%, versus +219.30% for the S&P 500 over the same period, an outperformance of -61.69%.

How soon must members of Congress disclose a trade?

Under the STOCK Act, members of Congress must publicly report a covered transaction within 45 days of the trade. Filings can still be delayed, amended, or contain errors.

Where can I see all congressional IBM trades?

Quantellect tracks every disclosed congressional trade in International Business Machines (IBM) on the International Business Machines congressional trading page, which aggregates filings across all members of Congress.

Frank A. LoBiondo's IBM tradesAll congressional filings for International Business MachinesFrank A. LoBiondo's full profile

Not investment advice. Congressional trading data is sourced from public STOCK Act disclosures, which are filed with a delay and may contain errors or be revised. Estimated prices and post-trade returns are derived algorithmically from public filings and end-of-day market data and describe historical activity, not a recommendation. Always do your own research and consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.

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