šØ BREAKING: Just five minutes before Trump's announcement to halt the attacks on Iran, massive trades reportedly hit the market.
Let me explain what just happened yesterday š
5 minutes before the President announced a halt to attacks on Iran⦠someone appears to have placed a $1.5 BILLION bet on stocks going up and dumped $192 million in oil.
5 minutesā¦
These trades were reportedly 4 to 6 times larger than anything else in the entire market at that moment. Whoever did this likely wasnāt acting randomly. You donāt usually risk $1.5 billion on a hunch.
There was no clear public indication this announcement was coming. No major leaks. No press buildup. Nothing obvious.
The only people who would have known were those close to the decision.
And somehow, within minutes, positions were taken that could generate more money than most people will earn in a lifetimeāoff a geopolitical move that impacts gas prices and billions in tax dollars.
American citizens feel the effects of decisions like this. Meanwhile, questions get raised about who might be benefiting.
This isnāt the first time people have pointed out unusually timed trades before major announcementsātariff reversals, policy shifts, war decisions.
Some say itās coincidence. Others arenāt so sure.
But when trades of this size happen right before major news drops, itās hard not to ask questions.
If an average person traded on inside information, the consequences would be severe.
Yet in situations like this, it often feels like no one is held accountable, and the story quickly fades as the next headline takes over.
Maybe thereās more to it. Maybe there isnāt.
But moments like this make people wonder:
Is the system truly fair?
Or is there more happening behind the scenes than weāre allowed to see?
Let me explain what just happened yesterday š
5 minutes before the President announced a halt to attacks on Iran⦠someone appears to have placed a $1.5 BILLION bet on stocks going up and dumped $192 million in oil.
5 minutesā¦
These trades were reportedly 4 to 6 times larger than anything else in the entire market at that moment. Whoever did this likely wasnāt acting randomly. You donāt usually risk $1.5 billion on a hunch.
There was no clear public indication this announcement was coming. No major leaks. No press buildup. Nothing obvious.
The only people who would have known were those close to the decision.
And somehow, within minutes, positions were taken that could generate more money than most people will earn in a lifetimeāoff a geopolitical move that impacts gas prices and billions in tax dollars.
American citizens feel the effects of decisions like this. Meanwhile, questions get raised about who might be benefiting.
This isnāt the first time people have pointed out unusually timed trades before major announcementsātariff reversals, policy shifts, war decisions.
Some say itās coincidence. Others arenāt so sure.
But when trades of this size happen right before major news drops, itās hard not to ask questions.
If an average person traded on inside information, the consequences would be severe.
Yet in situations like this, it often feels like no one is held accountable, and the story quickly fades as the next headline takes over.
Maybe thereās more to it. Maybe there isnāt.
But moments like this make people wonder:
Is the system truly fair?
Or is there more happening behind the scenes than weāre allowed to see?