US Probes $7B Oil Insider Trading
Analysis based on 32 articles · First reported Apr 22, 2026 · Last updated May 08, 2026
The market is significantly impacted by the ongoing investigations into potential insider trading, which undermines trust in the fairness and integrity of oil futures markets. The suspicious trades, totaling up to $7 billion, caused substantial volatility in Brent Crude and West Texas Intermediate prices, leading to hundreds of millions in profits for those who placed well-timed bets.
A series of suspicious, well-timed market bets on falling oil prices, totaling as much as $7 billion, occurred across multiple exchanges and derivatives just before major Iranian policy announcements by United States President Donald Trump. These announcements included delays to attacks on Iran's power infrastructure, ceasefires with Iran, and statements regarding the Strait of Hormuz. The trades, which involved short positions on Intercontinental Exchange and CME Group crude, diesel, and gasoline futures, are now under investigation by the United States — United States Department of Justice and the United States — United States Commodity Futures Trading Commission for potential insider trading. Experts like Adi Imsirovic and Jorge Montepeque have noted the highly unusual and concentrated nature of these trades, which consistently preceded significant drops in oil prices. The White House has also warned its staff against using nonpublic information for financial benefit, indicating internal concerns. Lawmakers and legal experts, including Robert Frenchman, are calling for thorough investigations into whether these trades were based on inside information or leaks from within the administration.
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