Tim Moore hasn't generated a single Google News headline in the last 24 hours, but he's generating something else: a paper trail. The North Carolina Republican filed 12 disclosed stock trades over the past 90 days, touching everything from a Harley-Davidson exit to a homebuilder he bought and sold within the same week. He sits on the House Committee on Financial Services, where a cluster of banking bills just passed the floor. He also holds a subcommittee seat covering Digital Assets, Financial Technology, and Artificial Intelligence, which gives his semiconductor trades a committee-overlap dimension the disclosures alone don't resolve.
What Social Is Saying
Six posts on Bluesky accuse Moore of using his influence in his North Carolina hometown, raise questions about a data center operated by T5 Data Centers, and describe an unsatisfying response to a FOIA request. Moore's office hasn't commented publicly. We don't have human sources and we're not a court, so we won't characterize those allegations further. What we can do is look at what he's been trading.
The Banking Votes and What He Bought Two Days Before
On May 20, Moore voted Yea on four bills in a single day: the American Access to Banking Act, the Community Bank Deposit Access Act of 2025, the Keeping Deposits Local Act, and the 25th Anniversary of 9/11 Commemorative Coin Act. The first three carry market relevance scores of 80 to 95 out of 100. All passed.
Moore sits on the House Committee on Financial Services, including its Financial Institutions and Oversight and Investigations subcommittees. These are not just floor votes for him. They land in his committee jurisdiction. Members are required to disclose trades. They are not required to divest, recuse, or abstain.
His most recent disclosed trade before those votes: a purchase of AT&T (ticker: T) on May 18, two days prior. Amount range: 5,000 to $50,000. AT&T is a telecom, not a bank, so the committee-overlap angle doesn't apply directly. The calendar is still its own kind of data point. He picked up the position two days before voting on four financial-sector bills, all of which passed.
The LGI Homes Flip
The most active single-ticker story in Moore's recent filings is LGI Homes (LGIH), a Texas-based homebuilder. He bought it three times in four days: 5,000–$50,000 on March 18, $50,000–00,000 on March 19, and 5,000–$50,000 on March 20. Total purchased position: somewhere between $80,000 and $200,000 in 72 hours.
Then, six days later on March 26, he sold LGIH for 00,000 to $250,000.
Buy, buy, buy, sell. Six days. Homebuilding is not in Moore's committee remit, so there's no oversight angle here. It reads as active trading, not passive portfolio management. Whether it worked depends on where the stock moved in that window, and the disclosures don't tell us that. What they tell us is the behavior: in and out of a single homebuilder in less than two weeks.
Cracker Barrel, Same Pattern
Moore purchased Cracker Barrel Old Country Store (CBRL) on March 23 for 5,000–$50,000. Nine days later, on April 1, he sold it for 5,000–$50,000.
His best disclosed trade in the full scored sample was also a Cracker Barrel buy: a December 31, 2025 purchase that generated 32.1% alpha over the following 30 days, per Blind Trust's disclosure record. The March version didn't make the top scorers list. The restaurant chain has nothing to do with financial services oversight.
The Harley Exit
On April 7, Moore sold Harley-Davidson (HOG) for $50,000 to 00,000. Harley has been under tariff pressure, and Moore voted on multiple bills this spring, though none specifically addressed motorcycle manufacturing. No committee overlap. His worst scored trades involve the same name: the HOG sale from November 2025 generated negative 14.9% alpha, and two Hyster-Yale Group (HY) sales lost 13.6% and 23.7% respectively. The Intel and CBRL wins are real. So are those losses.
Where the Committee Overlap Actually Lives
Moore's subcommittee covers Digital Assets, Financial Technology, and Artificial Intelligence. In August 2025, he filed five Intel (INTC) trades in thirteen days: purchases on August 1, 8, and 11 (each 5,000–$50,000), then a sale on August 13 (00,000–$250,000). Per Blind Trust's scoring, those three purchases generated 30-day alpha of 24.6%, 23.0%, and 17.9% respectively. The August 13 sale generated 7.0% alpha.
Intel is a chipmaker. Moore's subcommittee covers AI and financial technology. The overlap isn't perfect, but it's flagged.
The March 24 Nvidia (NVDA) sale — 5,000 to $50,000, same Technology committee-overlap flag — generated essentially zero alpha over 30 days. Across five committee-overlap trades: three strong positive, one modest positive, one flat.
The Full Scorecard
Across 86 scored trades in the full sample, Moore is 58 positive and 28 negative, with a mean 30-day alpha of 5.0% against the S&P 500. A 67% hit rate. Whether that reflects skill, favorable market timing, or luck inside a bull market is a question the data alone can't answer. What it can confirm: Moore is actively trading individual equities from a seat on a committee that oversees the financial sector and emerging technology.
The May Additions: IHG and Rolls-Royce
On May 7, Moore added two small positions: InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG) and Rolls-Royce Holdings (RYCEY), each in the ,000–5,000 range. Neither is in his committee remit. IHG is hospitality; Rolls-Royce Holdings is a UK defense and aerospace company, not the car brand. No vote-trade overlap flagged on either.
What the May 7 buys confirm is that Moore is not confining his portfolio to sectors he oversees. Hospitality, defense, telecom, homebuilding, restaurant chains, semiconductors — 12 trades in 90 days from a freshman member with a Financial Services committee seat and four banking votes on the board. The receipts are public. Make of them what you make of them.