19 comments

  • chopete3 16 hours ago ago

    >> Investors placed a bet

    Aren't these more of gamblers?. There is no real asset they are investing in.

    • alex43578 16 hours ago ago

      Oil futures are absolutely a real asset - this isn’t Kalshi “who wins an Oscar” junk. Oil futures let consumers like airlines hedge prices, so their role in price discovery and liquidity is important.

      • throwup238 13 hours ago ago

        When we had that oil glut years ago and traders couldn’t unload their futures, they found out the hard way that futures meant they were legally obligated to take delivery of real oil and store it, causing a mad scramble to figure out what to do with it when storage started running out.

  • bix6 a day ago ago

    Is it possible to trace this stuff back to individuals? Would love AI to do that.

    • Jimmc414 a day ago ago

      Since it's commodities it would be the CFTC, but it would be trivial since brokers are required by law to collect KYC information on all futures trades and anyone holding positions above the Large Trader Reporting threshold (a few hundred contracts for crude) is already disclosed to the CFTC by name. 7,990 lots of Brent in a one minute window is enormously above that threshold.

    • jackyinger a day ago ago

      I would love it if real people did that, and then acted on what they found with moral integrity.

    • Grosvenor a day ago ago

      Yes, if the SEC decides to they can trace it back to specific orders.

      Will the SEC decide to?

      • an0malous a day ago ago

        The orders are coming from… inside the house??

      • a day ago ago
        [deleted]
      • walletdrainer 19 hours ago ago

        CFTC, SEC does not regulate commodities but securities.

        • yieldcrv 13 hours ago ago

          SEC could find out because of the ETFs that trade the same underlying assets

    • JumpCrisscross 19 hours ago ago

      > Is it possible to trace this stuff back to individuals?

      Yes, depending where the trades were based and their market participants' KYC rigor.

      As the article mentions, the CFTC "is examining a series of trades in oil futures placed shortly before major shifts in President Donald Trump's Iran war policy" [1]. If the "lots of Brent crude futures" the article mentioned traded on the Intercontinental Exchange [2], when we can almost certainly trace it back to at least some individuals.

      [1] https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/us-probes-suspicious...

      [2] https://www.ice.com/products/219/Brent-Crude-Futures/data

    • ulfw 15 hours ago ago

      Would love human with brain to do that.

    • watwut 19 hours ago ago

      Why AI? You want tracker that dont hallucinate.

      But, you also need DOJ that prosecutes rich guy white crime, so.

  • runeks 8 hours ago ago

    This article is subscription-only for me. Anyone have a link?

  • metalglot 5 hours ago ago

    Bets placed on misinformation spread on a friday that's outdated by saturday morning. Turning into a weekend tradition at this point..

  • refurb 21 hours ago ago

    If this trade is based on inside information, it would be on the Iranian side since it's timed on the IRGC's X post.

    That seems like a smart move by Iran. Get rich off your own announcements.

    • anigbrowl 24 minutes ago ago

      That was my first thought, but it's also possible that diplomatic partners like Pakistan (and through them, the US) get notification of impending announcements. idk if Iranian government insiders/diplomats are legally able to trade futures due to sanctions.