GOP lawmakers' portfolios are migrating to Trump favorites like Intel and bitcoin
Republican lawmakersโ brokerage accounts have undergone a significant shift as GOP members of Congress load up on investments into areas touted by President Trump โ in particular Intel ( INTC ) and bitcoin ( BTC-USD ). Lawmaker trading on both sides of the aisle remains controve
Republican lawmakersโ brokerage accounts have undergone a significant shift as GOP members of Congress load up on investments into areas touted by President Trump โ in particular Intel ( INTC ) and bitcoin ( BTC-USD ).
Lawmaker trading on both sides of the aisle remains controversial, but a longstanding portfolio divide along party lines is clearly evolving.
Democratsโ investments have traditionally been tech-heavy in recent years, while GOP holdings often focused on more traditional sectors. But an exchange-traded fund that allows investors to mirror the aggregate portfolio of Republican lawmakers is perhaps the starkest example of a change on the GOP side.
It was long dominated by blue-chip companies like Shell ( SHEL ), Philip Morris ( PM ), and ConocoPhillips ( COP ). The makeup is dramatically different today, with the fund now reporting top five holdings that include Intel, Nvidia ( NVDA ), and the iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF ( IBIT ).
The increased GOP focus on tech and tech-aligned stocks mirrors Trump's own high volume of recent trades in the sector in the first quarter of 2026 after the US government took a 10% stake in Intel last year.
The president's account traded over $50 million in "Magnificent 7" stocks last quarter and also traded Intel, recent disclosures show, alongside his regular praising of the companiesโ CEOs.
Meanwhile, Democratic lawmakersโ strategies in recent years don't appear to have changed as dramatically. Nvidia makes up nearly 10% of Democratic lawmakersโ holdings, according to a parallel Democratic ETF that trades under the ticker NANC.
The change among GOP holdings does appear to have improved their returns โ at least so far in 2026.

