Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has disclosed two new options trades worth as much as $6 million, adding fresh positions in Intel and Uber Technologies through transactions made by her husband, Paul Pelosi, according to a congressional financial disclosure filed this week.

The Periodic Transaction Report, submitted to the House Clerk on June 23, shows purchases of 200 call option contracts in Intel and another 200 call option contracts in Uber. Both positions carry a $50 strike price and expire on March 19, 2027. The transactions were executed on May 29 and disclosed within the 45-day reporting window required under the STOCK Act.

The filing values the Intel options between $1 million and $5 million, while the Uber position is listed between $500,001 and $1 million. Because congressional disclosures report transactions in broad value ranges rather than exact amounts, the precise size of the investments remains unknown.

Unlike traditional stock purchases, call options give investors the right-but not the obligation-to purchase shares at a predetermined price before expiration. Each contract represents 100 shares, meaning the disclosed positions provide exposure to 20,000 shares of each company.

By the time the filing became public, both positions were already in profitable territory. Intel closed at $132.28 on June 23, according to Nasdaq data, substantially above the $50 strike price disclosed in the filing. Uber shares were trading near $70, also comfortably above the strike price.

The latest filing is likely to attract attention from retail investors who closely monitor congressional disclosures. Pelosi's portfolio has become one of the most widely followed on Wall Street after repeatedly outperforming broader equity markets. According to Unusual Whales' annual congressional trading review, the Pelosi portfolio returned 20.1% in 2025, compared with a 16.6% gain for the S&P 500.

That performance has fueled an industry dedicated to tracking congressional trades. Financial platforms regularly monitor House disclosure filings, while online investing communities frequently analyze newly reported transactions. Investment products designed to mirror congressional trading activity have also emerged in recent years.

The new filing, however, comes as that stream of disclosures could soon become less frequent. Pelosi has announced she will not seek another term in Congress, meaning her obligation to file public trading disclosures is expected to end when she leaves office in January 2027.

Recent disclosures also suggest a slowdown in overall trading activity. Data compiled by Quiver Quantitative show Pelosi's reported trading volume totaled approximately $8.88 million so far in 2026, down from $48.6 million during 2025 and $39.2 million the previous year.