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DOJ investigating $2.6 billion worth of oil bets placed just before Trump’s Iran war announcements, report says

The Independent — World Ariana Baio 0 переглядів 3 хв читання

The Department of Justice and a federal agency that oversees certain betting markets are reportedly probing a series of bets on oil prices that were placed shortly before President Donald Trump and an Iranian official making policy announcements regarding the Iran war.

Between March 23 and April 21, four multi-million-dollar trades were made betting oil prices would drop right before they did. The traders who acted on these made more than $2.6 billion.

But the suspiciously-timed trades have caught the attention of the DOJ and Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which are now probing them, Reuters and ABC News reported.

Roughly 15 minutes before Trump announced he would delay an attack on Iran’s power grid on March 23, traders bet more than $500 million that oil prices would fall, according to London Stock Exchange Group data shared with ABC News.

Hours before Trump announced a temporary ceasefire with Iran, on April 7, traders bet $960 million that oil prices would drop.

The series of bets predicted changes in oil prices minutes before announcements were made, according to reportsopen image in gallery
The series of bets predicted changes in oil prices minutes before announcements were made, according to reports (AFP/Getty)

Approximately 20 minutes before Iran’s Foreign Minister announced the Strait of Hormuz was open on April 17, traders bet $760 million that oil prices would dip. After the announcement, crude oil went down as much as 11 percent, Reuters reported.

On April 21, just 15 minutes before Trump announced he would extend the ceasefire with Iran, traders placed a series of bets, totalling more than $430 million, that oil prices would fall.

The Independent has asked the Department of Justice and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission for comment.

Trump’s war with Iran has caused major disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, which has experienced on-and-off again closures after the U.S. began a blockade on Iran’s ports. The Strait is an essential waterway responsible for transporting up to 34 percent of the world’s oil production.

As a result, global oil prices have been volatile.

While it’s not unusual for people to predict the raising and declining prices of oil, the timing of the trades has raised eyebrows.

The data from LSEG, one of the leading providers of financial markets infrastructure and data, given to ABC News, does not reveal any information on the identities of those behind the trades and does not prove that those individuals were trading based on insider information.

Last month, Bloomberg reported that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission had requested data from CME Group Inc. and Intercontinental Exchange Inc., whose platforms had allegedly been used to make trades on oil futures right before Iran war-related announcements.

Oil prices globally have been volatile since the start of the war with Iranopen image in gallery
Oil prices globally have been volatile since the start of the war with Iran (AFP/Getty)

The reported DOJ and Commodity Futures Trading Commission investigation arises as some lawmakers have raised concerns about people with insider information using prediction markets to place bets on events.

Senators Elizabeth Warren and Sheldon Whitehouse have already asked Michael Selig, the head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, to investigate the oil bets made on March 23.

“This pattern raises serious questions about whether there has been recurring misappropriation of material nonpublic government information and about the extent to which individuals inside or outside the government have acted on such information,” the senators wrote in a letter.

On March 24, the day after the flurry of oil bets were first made, the White House circulated a memo to staff, cautioning them not to place bets on future markets related to the Iran war, the Wall Street Journal reported.

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