Several media outlets have incorrectly cited a pre-Congress net worth of about $700,000. That number captures only her stock positions and excludes substantial business and property interests documented in the official filing. In other words, Greene entered federal office as a multimillionaire.
Data aggregated by analytics platform Quiver Quantitative shows that, by late 2025, Greene’s estimated net worth had risen to $25 million. The 33% increase in overall wealth is significant, yet it is overshadowed by developments inside her brokerage account. Quiver Quantitative now places the value of her stock portfolio between $2.6 million and $4 million, an expansion of roughly 476% from its 2021 level.
Trading record eclipses market benchmarks
Since taking her House seat, Greene has executed more than 450 stock transactions. In 2024 alone she purchased approximately $3.89 million worth of equities, according to House financial reports. That same year her holdings produced a 30.2% return, surpassing the S&P 500’s 24.9% gain and ranking her 23rd among congressional traders.
The pace continued through 2025. Public filings show 216 trades so far this year, of which 161 are currently profitable—representing a win rate of about 74.5%. Ninety-two of those positions have generated gains greater than 10%.
Greene attributes the results to an outside professional hired under a fiduciary arrangement. Speaking at a Georgia town hall, she said she does not initiate trades herself and credited her portfolio manager for “buying the dip” during market pullbacks.
Criticism over timing of certain purchases
While supporters point to disciplined management, critics have questioned whether some of Greene’s purchases benefited from knowledge of upcoming policy actions. Several trades appeared to precede market-moving announcements from the Trump administration. Congressional ethics rules prohibit the use of non-public information for personal gain, yet the practice of members trading individual stocks remains legal. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, multiple bipartisan bills seeking to restrict lawmakers from owning or trading equities have stalled in recent sessions.
Five standout gains during her tenure
Specific trade-level disclosures identify five positions that contributed heavily to Greene’s overall performance:
- Large-cap technology rebound: A concentrated purchase of a leading e-commerce company during a 2022 downturn appreciated sharply when consumer spending data surprised to the upside.
- Defense sector exposure: Stakes in two major defense contractors jumped after the administration confirmed an expanded overseas deployment plan.
- Domestic energy bet: Holdings in a natural-gas producer gained as winter demand forecasts rose and regulatory approvals accelerated.
- Health-care equipment play: A mid-cap manufacturer of diagnostic devices advanced more than 40% following an expedited product-approval announcement.
- Regional banking trade: Shares in a southeastern regional bank rallied after the Federal Reserve signaled a slower pace of rate hikes, lifting sentiment across the sector.
Combined, these five positions represent a substantial portion of the increase in her stock account, although detailed dollar figures for each entry were not provided in public summaries.
Next steps after resignation
Greene has not yet outlined her post-Congress plans. She remains a part-owner of Taylor Commercial, and her real-estate portfolio includes multiple properties in Georgia. Any new professional ventures may be clarified after January 2026, when her resignation takes effect and the House seat for Georgia’s 14th District becomes vacant.
For now, she is poised to depart Washington with far greater market exposure than she held upon arrival, underscoring the lucrative potential—and persistent controversy—tied to lawmakers’ ability to trade individual securities while in office.
Crédito da imagem: Rudro Chakrabarti