Talk about a rough April. Senator John Kennedy watched $786.5K evaporate from his stock portfolio last month, according to Quiver Quantitative’s live tracking.
Here’s the thing though—dude’s still sitting on $15.8M in net worth, ranking 61st among all Congress members. Not exactly broke, but definitely having a moment.
Kennedy’s got about $5.6M parked in publicly traded stocks that Quiver can actually monitor in real-time. His biggest flex? A $15K MTUM buy back in October 2018 that’s up 69% since then. So at least something’s working out.
Meanwhile, the senator’s been busy pushing bills on IMF Special Drawing Rights, crop insurance modifications, and banking transparency. Classic political multitasking while your portfolio bleeds.
The irony? He’s proposing a “Transparency in Banking Act” while his own finances are getting splashed all over the internet. Welcome to politics in 2025, where your net worth is public spectacle.
(Fair warning: These numbers are estimates based on disclosure filings. Could be off. Politics, right?)
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Congress's Biggest Losers: Senator Kennedy Just Got Rekt for $786.5K in One Month
Talk about a rough April. Senator John Kennedy watched $786.5K evaporate from his stock portfolio last month, according to Quiver Quantitative’s live tracking.
Here’s the thing though—dude’s still sitting on $15.8M in net worth, ranking 61st among all Congress members. Not exactly broke, but definitely having a moment.
Kennedy’s got about $5.6M parked in publicly traded stocks that Quiver can actually monitor in real-time. His biggest flex? A $15K MTUM buy back in October 2018 that’s up 69% since then. So at least something’s working out.
Meanwhile, the senator’s been busy pushing bills on IMF Special Drawing Rights, crop insurance modifications, and banking transparency. Classic political multitasking while your portfolio bleeds.
The irony? He’s proposing a “Transparency in Banking Act” while his own finances are getting splashed all over the internet. Welcome to politics in 2025, where your net worth is public spectacle.
(Fair warning: These numbers are estimates based on disclosure filings. Could be off. Politics, right?)