A senior Iranian official has stunned observers by entering America’s political debate with a piece of financial advice — telling US investors to trade against President Donald Trump. The extraordinary intervention came as critics accuse the president of moving markets through well-timed social media posts during the escalating war with Iran. The remarks quickly ricocheted across financial circles, highlighting how geopolitical conflict is now colliding with Wall Street volatility. From battlefield to trading floor The comments came from Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf, speaker of Iran’s parliament, who posted a blunt message aimed at American traders. “Heads-up,” he wrote on social media platform X. “If they pump it, short it. If they dump it, go long.” Ghalibaf claimed that pre-market “news” or statements from Trump’s platform Truth Social often act as signals for profit-taking — effectively suggesting investors should treat the president’s comments as a reverse indicator. Mounting suspicion over ‘mysterious’ trades The jab landed amid growing scrutiny over unusual trading patterns surrounding Trump’s posts about the Iran conflict. Several of his announcements — from military developments to ceasefire hints — have coincided with sharp swings in oil prices, defence stocks and broader markets. Critics argue the pattern raises uncomfortable questions about whether insiders close to the administration could be profiting from geopolitical shocks. Experts stunned by Tehran’s intervention Financial analysts reacted with disbelief that an Iranian official had joined the debate. Economist Saifedean Ammous remarked that Iran targeting alleged market manipulation might be “more effective than going after missile defence systems.” Oil market researcher Rory Johnston described the moment as “unreal,” while analyst Edward Dowd called it simply “surreal.” War politics spill into global markets The exchange underscores how deeply financial markets are now entangled with the Iran conflict. Every presidential statement can shift billions of dollars in minutes, from crude oil futures to airline shares and energy stocks. With tensions still rising and traders scanning each new message from the White House, markets are bracing for more volatility — and more accusations that politics and profit are colliding in real time. Trump directly called out for alleged market manipulation by unlikely source
Create an account or sign in to comment