The $1.5B Insider Trade Before Trump's Iran Post | Prof G Markets
On March 25th, someone placed $1.5 billion in S&P futures and $192 million in oil futures trades — five minutes before President Trump announced Iran peace talks. The positions netted $60 million within minutes. Senator Chris Murphy called it «mind-blowing corruption.» But this isn't an isolated incident: similar trading patterns preceded Liberation Day tariffs, the 90-day tariff pause, and multiple crypto launches tied to the Trump family. With the SEC enforcement chief resigned in protest and no prosecutions in sight, the question isn't just who profited — it's whether American markets can function when the people writing policy are simultaneously trading on it.
Ключевые выводы
Multiple instances of suspicious trading — totaling billions in volume — occurred minutes before major Trump policy announcements, including Iran talks, tariff rollbacks, and crypto launches.
The SEC's enforcement chief, Margaret Ryan, resigned in protest after being blocked from investigating potential insider trading cases tied to the administration.
Congressional insider trading is technically legal under current law; after the 2012 Stock Act briefly restricted it, Congress quietly reinstated trading privileges by voice vote within eight months.
While corruption is reaching unprecedented levels, any resulting recession from private credit contagion is unlikely to trigger a 2008-style financial crisis due to stronger bank capitalization.
The pattern of grift creates a «concrete ceiling» for younger Americans who see a rigged system where proximity to power, not merit, determines economic success.
Вкратце
Systematic insider trading tied to Trump administration announcements has netted hundreds of millions of dollars with zero legal consequences, creating a two-tiered system that undermines market integrity and erodes trust in American institutions.
The Iran Trade That Netted $60 Million in Minutes
Suspicious futures trades preceded Trump's Iran announcement by five minutes.
A Pattern, Not an Anomaly
«This Has Gone Exponential»
Scaramucci explains why Trump-era corruption dwarfs previous insider trading scandals.
“Trump has taken it exponential with his team. But do you know who a Democratic representative is? Kelly Morrison. She bought Saronic Technologies, an autonomous warship company, 9 days after the beginning of the war with Iran. Right as the Navy was awarding Saronic contracts. Nancy Pelosi has traded her account better than any hedge fund manager that I've ever met in my life, myself included. They're running rampant in Washington with the corruption. As an American, I'm embarrassed by it.”
Why No One Is Going to Jail
The SEC's enforcement chief resigned after being blocked from investigating.
Margaret Ryan, a longtime SEC enforcement official, resigned under protest in recent weeks after being told she could not pursue insider trading cases tied to the administration. Scaramucci noted that these trades are «easy to tag and easy to geocenter» — the SEC has the technical capability to identify perpetrators immediately. But Ryan was explicitly blocked by her superiors from bringing cases.
The 2012 Stock Act briefly prohibited Congress from trading on non-public information, but within eight months, lawmakers reinstated their trading privileges by voice vote — deliberately avoiding a recorded vote that would appear on C-SPAN. Scaramucci believes any new legislation, such as Senator Chris Murphy's «Bets Off Act,» will either fail or be quietly repealed after the midterms. Historical prosecutions — the Teapot Dome scandal, the Abscam case, Martha Stewart's $45,000 insider trade — all resulted in jail time. Today, with hundreds of millions at stake, there are no consequences.
The absence of enforcement creates a system where proximity to power, not merit, determines wealth. Scaramucci warned that young Americans now see a «concrete ceiling» — a two-tiered system where insiders profit with impunity while ordinary citizens face prosecution for far smaller infractions.
The Private Credit Time Bomb
Steve Eisman warns retail investors are trapped in illiquid funds.
Recession, Not Financial Crisis
Eisman draws a critical distinction between a credit crunch and systemic collapse.
Recession, Not Financial Crisis
Eisman categorically states that U.S. banks are better capitalized than at any point in history, with unprecedented liquidity on their balance sheets. If private credit triggers a recession, it will be «garden variety» — painful, with job losses, but not a repeat of 2008. The key difference: no one will fear the collapse of JP Morgan, Citigroup, or Wells Fargo. Silicon Valley Bank was a unique outlier.
The Democratic Opening
Ed argues anti-corruption could be the defining midterm issue.
Ed Elson closed the episode with a political argument: Democrats have an opportunity to make insider trading and corruption the centerpiece of their 2026 midterm campaigns. Unlike partisan issues such as tariffs or DEI, corruption is universally unpopular and bipartisan in its targets. A candidate who promises to prosecute every Trump-affiliated insider trader — and follows through — could galvanize voters across the spectrum.
The grift is now in plain sight: Jared Kushner raising billions from foreign governments before steering the U.S. into war with Iran; Trump children investing in defense stocks days before launching Middle East attacks; David Sacks running AI policy while investing in AI startups through his VC firm. Ed argued this is «what happens in Russia» and «the fictional world of Gotham» — a system where criminals are in bed with the cops. The only remedy is electoral: vote them out, then prosecute.
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