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METARo Khanna

Khanna Cycles $24K Through Meta During Spring Rebound

Rep. Ro Khanna (Democrat-CA) disclosed 3 trades in Meta Platforms, Inc. (META) worth ~$24K between February 24, 2026 and March 30, 2026.

April 1, 2026·About Ro Khanna (Democrat-CA)

Rep. Ro Khanna cycled roughly $24,000 through META between late February and the end of March, executing a quick series of buys and a sell as the tech giant traded near the middle of its 52-week range.

The California Democrat disclosed three transactions in Meta Platforms, Inc., the social media and artificial intelligence heavyweight that currently trades at $613.71, with a 52-week range of $479.80 to $796.25.

  • Feb. 24, 2026 — Buy — $1,000–$15,000 (DC)
  • Mar. 6, 2026 — Buy — $1,000–$15,000 (DC)
  • Mar. 30, 2026 — Sell — $1,000–$15,000 (DC)

The transactions, reported within the broad disclosure ranges required under federal law, amount to an estimated $24,000 in total activity over five weeks. The trades were listed under "DC," indicating they were made by the lawmaker’s dependent child.

Meta shares climbed during much of March as investors continued to reward the company’s aggressive investments in artificial intelligence and digital advertising infrastructure. By the end of the month, the stock remained well below its 52-week high but had rebounded significantly from late-2025 volatility.

Khanna, who has logged 17,672 career trades according to public filings, is among the more active members of Congress when it comes to personal stock disclosures. He also sits on the House Armed Services Committee, the House Oversight Committee, and the House Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party — panels that regularly engage with issues tied to cybersecurity, emerging technologies and U.S.-China tech rivalry.

Meta’s business footprint intersects with several of those policy areas. The company is a major player in artificial intelligence development, content moderation policy, and digital infrastructure — all subjects of congressional oversight. Lawmakers on Armed Services and related subcommittees, including Cyber, Information Technologies, and Innovation, routinely examine national security risks linked to social media platforms and advanced computing systems.

Khanna is far from alone in trading the stock. At least 94 lawmakers have reported transactions in Meta, underscoring the company’s popularity across party lines as one of the largest technology firms in U.S. markets.

The STOCK Act requires members of Congress to disclose stock trades within 45 days, though it does not prohibit them from buying or selling individual equities. Khanna’s March disclosure adds to a steady stream of latest congressional trades involving mega-cap technology names.

While the individual transactions fall within relatively modest dollar ranges, the timing — two purchases followed by a sale less than a month later — suggests a short-term repositioning rather than a long-term accumulation. Whether the household realized a gain depends on the precise execution prices, which are not disclosed under current reporting rules.

For investors tracking Capitol Hill activity, Meta remains one of the most widely held and frequently traded stocks among lawmakers, reflecting both its market dominance and its central role in ongoing policy debates over AI, data governance and global tech competition.

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