Something feels off in the oil market right now… and it’s hard to ignore.

While headlines are loud about war, tension, and uncertainty, there’s a quieter story playing out underneath — one that looks a lot like precision timing, not luck.

April 17.

Around $760 million in oil shorts dropped into the market. Not hours before news… just minutes.

Twenty minutes later, Trump announces the Strait of Hormuz is open.

Oil instantly collapses nearly 10%.

Whoever placed those trades didn’t guess — they knew.

But it doesn’t stop there.

April 7.

Another massive position — $950 million in shorts — placed ahead of a US-Iran ceasefire announcement.

Same pattern. Same outcome.

Go back a bit further.

March 23.

Roughly $500 million in shorts opened before news broke about delayed strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure.

Three trades.

Over $2.2 billion in total positioning.

Each one placed right before market-moving announcements.

That’s not random. That’s timing so sharp it cuts through probability.

Now the CFTC is already looking into the March 23 and April 7 trades.

And the latest one? It just happened — still fresh, still unfolding.

This isn’t just about oil anymore.

It’s about who gets access to information before the rest of the market even has a chance to react.

Because when moves this size line up perfectly with global headlines…

it stops feeling like trading — and starts feeling like something else entirely.