Nearly $1 billion was bet on falling oil prices—just hours before the U.S. announced a ceasefire with Iran. That’s the trade now under scrutiny.
U.S. Congressman Ritchie Torres pushed regulators on Tuesday to investigate a burst of oil market activity that hit within a one-minute window ahead of the announcement. The trades were effectively wagers that oil prices would drop. And drop they did. Crude futures fell about 15% after the ceasefire became public.
These were paper bets, or contracts tied to the future price of oil. If a trader thinks oil prices will fall, they sell those contracts ahead of time and buy them back cheaper later. The bigger the move, the bigger the profit. And timing is everything.
And in this case, Torres is thinking that the timing was a little too perfect.
Placing nearly $950 million in downside bets shortly before a market-moving geopolitical announcement raises a simple question: was it a smart guess—or did someone know what was coming?
Torres wants the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to look at it together. Other lawmakers, including Senators Elizabeth Warren and Sheldon Whitehouse, are already raising concerns about similar well-timed trades tied to major policy decisions on Iran, Venezuela, and tariffs.
Since the Iran conflict began, crude has surged roughly 40% and traded above $100 per barrel as flows through the Strait of Hormuz, normally about 20% of global supply, were disrupted.
That kind of volatility creates a wealth of opportunity. Big swings mean big profits for traders positioned correctly. But markets are supposed to run on public information, not privileged access.
If these trades were based on inside knowledge, they would cross a line into illegal territory.
Regulators now look to uncover whether this was this sharp positioning or something else entirely.
By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com
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