Every congressional stock disclosure, caught the hour it drops, cross-referenced against committee seats and trading history, and delivered as a two-paragraph brief a human actually wants to read.
🏛️ BUY — Rep. ████ filed $1–5M of NVDA calls. Third semiconductor buy this quarter. Filed 23 days after the trade.
📊 Semiconductors just became the most-bought sector in Congress this month — up 4 spots from last month.
Copy-the-filings strategy: +18.2% YTD vs S&P +11.4%. Paper trades only — your money never moves.
💬 "Who else bought chips lately?" → 4 members, 2 on the Commerce Committee. Tap to see.
Anyone can look up a filing. The work is reading hundreds of them, remembering who sits on which committee, and noticing the pattern before everyone else. That's the job Capitol Pulse never sleeps on.
Ask it like a coworker — "What did ████ rotate into this quarter?" "Who's piling into the same stock?" "Compare to last year." Every answer is grounded in the actual filings, with links to the source documents. Powered by your own API key on the Pro tier.
Follow specific members, tickers, or whole sectors. Everything else stays silent.
A simulated portfolio mirrors the filings so you can see how copy-trading would have performed. Clearly labeled. Never real money.
It watches, parses, and writes while you do anything else. That's what you're paying for.
A member of Congress files a required STOCK Act disclosure. It's public the moment it lands.
Within the hour it parses the filing and cross-references committee, history, and sector.
A plain-English alert hits your phone. Tap in to interrogate it or check the sandbox.
Set your watchlist once. Pulse handles the other 23 hours and 59 minutes.