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17,000% Return Controversy Escalates: U.S. Congress “Information Advantage Trading” Once Again Puts Spotlight on the Issue
U.S. Representative Anna Paulina Luna accuses former Speaker Nancy Pelosi of allegedly using non-public information to make investments, saying her long-term investment return rate is as high as approximately 17,000%, far above market benchmarks.
Related questions point out:
Pelosi’s family investment portfolio is about $280 million; since 1987, her overall gains have significantly outperformed the Dow Jones Index (about 2,300%), and she has repeatedly carried out precisely timed buying and selling operations in technology stocks (such as NVDA, AAPL, AMZN, GOOGL), sparking public discussion about “information advantage.”
At the same time, a comparison case is also mentioned:
A currently serving service member has been prosecuted for making market bets based on sensitive information and faces a maximum prison sentence of 50 years, triggering fairness concerns.
In addition, although the STOCK Act—Congressional trading disclosure legislation—exists, its penalties are relatively light, and the effectiveness of its enforcement has long been questioned. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has also publicly called for strengthening restrictions on trading by members of Congress and their family members.
Structurally, the core of this controversy is not just “ability to make money,” but whether “information is fair.”
In any market, what truly determines trust is not returns themselves, but whether the rules apply consistently to everyone.
When the rules begin to be questioned, the market’s long-term stability will also be reexamined.