Unusual trading patterns in financial markets have
preceded several major announcements by President Donald Trump during his
second term, raising questions about potential insider trading.
An examination of market
data by the BBC identified consistent spikes in trading activity hours
or minutes before Trump made significant market-moving statements on social
media or in interviews, and some financial analysts say the pattern bears
hallmarks of illegal insider trading, while others contend traders have simply
become more adept at anticipating presidential interventions.
In one notable instance on March 9, oil futures traders
placed unusually large bets on falling oil prices 47 minutes before Trump told
CBS News the Iran conflict was "very complete, pretty much." When the
reporter posted the interview on X, oil prices plunged 25 percent, and traders
holding those positions profited millions of dollars.
A similar pattern emerged March 23, when oil bets surged
14 minutes before Trump posted about reaching a "complete and total
resolution" to hostilities with Iran. Oil prices subsequently dropped 11
percent.
Trading anomalies also preceded Trump's announcement of a
90-day tariff pause on April 9, 2025, when the S&P 500 index jumped 9.5
percent — one of its largest single-day gains since World War II.
Contract trading jumped
to over 10,000 per minute shortly before the announcement, compared to hundreds
earlier that day. Some traders bet over $2 million on stock increases,
potentially generating nearly
$20 million in profits.
On prediction markets, unusual activity accompanied other
major announcements. One Poly-market account called Burdensome-Mix placed
$32,500 in bets predicting Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro's ouster by Jan.
31, then won $436,000 when U.S. special forces seized Maduro on Jan. 3. The
account subsequently changed its username and stopped betting.
Six Poly-market accounts created in February collectively
earned $1.2 million betting on U.S. strikes against Iran by February 28, then
largely ceased activity afterward.
The SEC declined to comment on allegations that
presidential announcements may have "enriched administration insiders and
friends." The White House did not respond to BBC requests for comment. A
White House spokesman previously stated that implications of official
involvement in insider trading were "baseless and irresponsible."
Legal experts note that proving insider trading remains
difficult without identifying information sources. No government officials have
been prosecuted under insider trading laws despite the prohibition being
extended to federal officials in 2012.
-Travis Gettys, Newsbreak

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