Rep. April McClain Delaney disclosed selling roughly $40,000 worth of shares in JLL — Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated — across five transactions between late February and mid-March.
The Maryland Democrat reported each sale in the $1,000 to $15,000 range, with the trades occurring from Feb. 23 through March 13, 2026. In total, the disclosed value of the transactions is estimated at approximately $40,000.
- Feb. 23, 2026: Sell — $1K–$15K (DC)
- Feb. 24, 2026: Sell — $1K–$15K (DC)
- Feb. 27, 2026: Sell — $1K–$15K (DC)
- Mar. 3, 2026: Sell — $1K–$15K (DC)
- Mar. 13, 2026: Sell — $1K–$15K (DC)
The disclosures list the owner as “DC,” indicating the assets are held by a dependent child.
JLL, a global commercial real estate brokerage and investment management firm, trades on the New York Stock Exchange and currently carries a market capitalization of $14.1 billion. Shares recently traded at $299.29, near the middle of their 52-week range of $194.36 to $363.06.
Timing the Sales
The sales came after JLL shares rebounded sharply from late-2025 lows, climbing back toward the $300 level. The stock remains below its 52-week high of $363.06 but has staged a significant recovery from last year’s trough.
Commercial real estate services firms like JLL have faced a volatile environment marked by higher interest rates, uneven office demand and shifting capital markets activity. At the same time, improving transaction volumes and stabilization in financing markets have supported parts of the sector.
By spreading the transactions across five separate days over three weeks, the trades appear structured as incremental sales rather than a single block exit.
Committee Roles and Trading History
McClain Delaney serves on the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology and the House Agriculture Committee, including subcommittees covering commodity markets, digital assets, conservation, biotechnology, research and technology. Those panels do not directly oversee commercial real estate brokerage firms like JLL.
Since taking office, she has disclosed 250 trades, placing her among the more active members of Congress in terms of transaction volume. Fourteen other lawmakers have reported trading JLL shares, underscoring the stock’s presence in congressional portfolios.
Lawmakers are required under the STOCK Act to disclose stock trades within 45 days, a transparency measure designed to allow public scrutiny of financial activity.
The JLL sales represent a relatively modest portion of a diversified trading history, but the clustered timing — and the fact that they were executed at prices well above the stock’s 52-week low — adds context to the decision.
For readers tracking patterns in congressional investing, the transactions add to a broader picture of how members manage exposure to cyclical sectors like real estate services. More details on these and other moves are available in the latest congressional trades database.
As commercial property markets continue to adjust to post-pandemic demand shifts and interest rate dynamics, JLL’s performance — and lawmakers’ positioning — will remain under scrutiny.