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Did they know something? A George Soros and BlackRock-linked Texas-based investment company, Austin Private Wealth LLC, has denied trying to short sell 12 million shares of Trump Media & Technology Group ($DJT) in the hours before the failed assassination attempt on Donald Trump. Short selling is the practice of borrowing shares and selling them in the hopes the price will go down. When the share value drops, the borrower can buy the shares back at the new lower price, profiting from the price difference. Note that this is often only done on paper – something called a put option – which gives the aspiring short seller the right to do all this after the expected market crash. Put options themselves can be packaged and sold as derivatives, because capitalism. It’s basically just gambling with IOUs, but for rich people who know things.
The day before the assassination attempt, Austin Private Wealth made a filing with the Security and Energy Commission for a put option on 12 million shares of $DJT, which is enormous. Almost as enormous as certain trades made on the morning of 9/11. Had Trump died, the stock value would have plummeted and Austin would have made up to an estimated $1 trillion in profit. The shooter missed, and Austin was out of the money, as they say. Instead of becoming practically worthless, Trump’s stock rose as dramatically as he did, and Austin lost millions.
Austin’s wealthy ties have aroused all sorts of juicy suspicions about just why they thought to short Trump shares moments before the shooting. The appearance of the names ‘BlackRock’ and ‘Vanguard’ in their filings in particular – BlackRock just so happened to have a promo advert for investment in schools that just so happened to feature shooter Thomas Crooks. Austin have also been linked to George Soros, the Rothschild family, and the Bush family, although these links are less concrete. However, George W Bush was a surprise no-show at the Republican National Convention last week, which further aroused suspicions.
Austin Private Wealth have blamed the put option, the largest single trade in the company’s history, on a ‘clerical error.’ |
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