He’s not campaigning in Iowa, he’s not taking the Democrats’ debate stage – and he’s keeping details of his wealth to himself.

Mike Bloomberg’s unusual presidential campaign has won a second reprieve from the Federal Election Commission, delaying the filing of required financial disclosure forms for another 45 days.

That means he won’t have to reveal information about his vast personal fortune until March 20 — two weeks after Super Tuesday, the first test of his candidacy.

Bloomberg “has made diligent efforts to prepare his report,” his attorney Lawrence H. Norton wrote in a Friday letter to the FEC.

Norton cited “the complexity of [Bloomberg’s] holdings” in requesting the delay, which an FEC official promptly granted.

The former New York City mayor, whose wealth is estimated at north of $50 billion, is spending lavishly on his self-funded White House campaign – hiring 1,000 staffers and dropping an estimated $200 million on television and digital ads since tossing his hat in the ring Nov. 21.

That has made him a target for his fellow Democrats.

“He is skipping the democracy part of this,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) sniffed last week.

Campaign spokeswoman Galia Slayen declined to comment.