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Finance & Economics

Fraud, markets, banks, offshore secrecy, and myths about who controls money.

Finance and economics has a built-in advantage for Conspirafy: many real conspiracies are documented in legal and regulatory records. LIBOR, Wirecard, Panama Papers, FTX, cryptocurrency wash trading, and parts of the 2008 financial crisis all show collusion, concealment, or fraud. The paper trail is often stronger than in other categories because money leaves records.

The risk is that confirmed financial misconduct can make every monetary institution look like a single hidden control system. Federal Reserve claims, central-bank myths, Great Reset economics, cashless-society panic, and market-manipulation narratives often mix real institutional complexity with unsupported conclusions. This category should explain structure before verdict.

Finance pages should be rich in primary sources: indictments, settlement agreements, SEC and CFTC orders, parliamentary reports, bankruptcy filings, leaked document repositories, court exhibits, and reputable investigative journalism. Books can be useful for narrative context, but the page should make clear which claims are supported by documents.

Future gaps should connect finance to broader conspiracy ecosystems: Great Reset and WEF narratives, cashless society claims, ESG/social-credit claims, central bank digital currency myths, food-supply inflation conspiracies, and claims about elite ownership of every major asset. Some belong in government or technology too, which is exactly why topic hubs matter.

Readers need a way to distinguish incentives from plots. A bank can act badly without requiring a secret world government. A market can be manipulated without proving that every price movement is controlled. A public-private institution can be opaque without being wholly private. Pages should make those distinctions explicit.

The category should become the site's 'follow the documents' training ground. If a claim is true, there should be filings, fines, transactions, testimony, or leaked records. If the claim leaps from complexity to omnipotence, the page should show the leap.

Reading path

Start with LIBOR, Panama Papers, Wirecard, FTX-adjacent crypto manipulation, and the 2008 crisis. Then read the Federal Reserve page to see how real institutional opacity gets turned into a stronger unsupported claim.

Coverage gaps we are filling next
  • Great Reset economic claims
  • Cashless society control claims
  • Central bank digital currency myths
  • ESG and social-credit claims
  • Food-supply and inflation conspiracy claims
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
BALCO Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative (revealed 2003)
Victor Conte's Burlingame, California nutrition company supplied undetectable designer steroid THG ('the clear'), modafinil, EPO, and human growth hormone to a roster of elite athletes including Barry Bonds, Marion Jones, Tim Montgomery, Bill Romanowski, and Jason Giambi. A September 2003 IRS-CID raid led by agent Jeff Novitzky exposed the network. Conte received four months in prison and four months home detention in 2005. Marion Jones was sentenced to six months in prison in 2008 for perjury. Barry Bonds was convicted of obstruction of justice before that conviction was overturned in 2015.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Operación Puerto Madrid doping investigation (2006)
Spanish Guardia Civil raided Dr. Eufemiano Fuentes' Madrid clinic on Calle Zurbano on May 23, 2006, seizing over 200 blood bags labeled with athlete codenames alongside EPO and transfusion equipment. Approximately 50 professional cyclists were implicated including Jan Ullrich, Ivan Basso, Alejandro Valverde, and Tyler Hamilton. A 2013 court ruling ordered the blood bags destroyed before identification; this was overturned by the Audiencia Provincial of Madrid in 2016, but most bags had by then been destroyed or contaminated. Fuentes received a one-year suspended sentence.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Lance Armstrong US Postal Service doping (1998-2010)
Seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong (1999-2005) led a systematic team doping programme on the US Postal Service and Discovery Channel squads. The USADA 'Reasoned Decision' published October 10, 2012 — a 200-page report supported by approximately 26 teammate affidavits — documented EPO injections, blood transfusions, and testosterone use. Armstrong received a lifetime competitive ban and was stripped of his Tour titles. He confessed publicly to Oprah Winfrey on January 17-18, 2013. Total civil and legal settlements exceeded $100 million.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
AIG bailout (Sep 16 2008 onwards)
The Federal Reserve extended an $85 billion emergency credit facility to American International Group on 16 September 2008 — the day after Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy — to prevent AIG's collapse from triggering cascading defaults across the global financial system. The rescue was later expanded to a combined Fed and Treasury TARP exposure of approximately $182.5 billion. AIG Financial Products, operating from London under Joseph Cassano, had sold $441 billion in credit-default swap protection on subprime CDOs with inadequate collateral reserves. When AIG was bailed out, approximately $62 billion flowed through to Goldman Sachs and other financial counterparties at face value — a "pass-through" that drew intense Congressional scrutiny. The $165 million bonus controversy of March 2009 further inflamed public anger. The government ultimately reported a combined profit on the rescue by December 2012. A shareholder lawsuit (Starr v. United States) reached the Supreme Court; the Court unanimously affirmed the Fed had legal authority to act.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Lehman Brothers Repo 105 accounting fraud (2007-08)
Lehman Brothers used Repo 105 transactions to temporarily move $50 billion or more in assets off its balance sheet at each quarter-end, artificially deflating its reported leverage ratios and concealing its true financial condition from investors and regulators. UK law firm Linklaters provided the legal opinions that made the transactions possible; US counsel had refused. Bankruptcy examiner Anton Valukas documented the scheme in a 2,200-page report published March 2010. Ernst & Young, Lehman's auditor, was later sued by the New York Attorney General and settled for $99 million in April 2015. The SEC declined to bring criminal charges against senior executives including CEO Dick Fuld.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsPartially True
Bear Stearns collapse / JPMorgan rescue (Mar 2008)
Bear Stearns, the fifth-largest US investment bank, collapsed over the weekend of 14-17 March 2008 following a liquidity crisis rooted in its two failed hedge funds — the High-Grade Structured Credit Strategies Fund and the Enhanced Leverage fund, which had imploded in June 2007 after heavy exposure to subprime mortgage securities. JPMorgan Chase acquired Bear Stearns at $2 per share (later raised to $10), backed by a $30 billion Federal Reserve emergency lending facility (Maiden Lane LLC) — the first major use of the Fed's Section 13(3) emergency powers since the Great Depression. Hedge fund managers Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin were charged with securities fraud and acquitted at trial in November 2009. "Naked short selling" conspiracy theories attributing the collapse to coordinated market manipulation are not supported by the evidence.
8 sources4% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Olympus Corporation accounting fraud (Oct 2011)
In October 2011, newly appointed Olympus CEO Michael Woodford was fired after questioning $1.7 billion in advisory fees paid on the Gyrus acquisition and three smaller deals. An independent committee report in December 2011 confirmed a $2 billion fraud: a 'tobashi' scheme concealing investment losses accumulated since the 1990s bubble. President Tsuyoshi Kikukawa, executive VP Hisashi Mori, and auditor Hideo Yamada were convicted in March 2013 with three-year suspended sentences. Olympus paid a record ¥700 million fine to the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Satyam Computer Services fraud (Jan 2009)
On 7 January 2009, Satyam Computer Services chairman B. Ramalinga Raju sent a letter to the board confessing to a $1.5 billion accounting fraud sustained for more than six years. Cash balances had been fabricated, 13,000 ghost employees carried on payroll, and 7,561 fake invoices raised. Auditors S Gopalakrishnan and Srinivas Talluri of PwC India (Lovelock & Lewes) were convicted in 2015. Raju and nine others were convicted on 9 April 2015 by the Special CBI Court (Saket) and sentenced to seven years with ₹50 million fines. Tech Mahindra acquired Satyam on 13 April 2009 for $351 million. Known as 'India's Enron.'
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Siemens AG FCPA bribery (revealed 2006-08)
Siemens AG, the German industrial conglomerate, paid more than $1.4 billion in bribes across 60+ countries between the mid-1990s and 2007, including contracts in Argentina (national-ID), Bangladesh (telecom), Iraq (Oil-for-Food), Nigeria (telecom), and Venezuela (rail). German prosecutors raided Siemens's Munich offices in November 2006. On 15 December 2008, a joint SEC, DOJ, and Munich prosecutor settlement imposed $800 million in US penalties and €395 million in Germany — totalling over $1.6 billion, the largest FCPA settlement at the time. CEO Heinrich von Pierer had resigned in 2007. Siemens subsequently established one of the most extensive corporate compliance programmes in history.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Knight Capital Group $440M algorithmic trading loss (Aug 1 2012)
On 1 August 2012, Knight Capital Group lost approximately $440 million in 45 minutes due to an algorithmic trading misconfiguration during the NYSE's Retail Liquidity Program launch. New SMARS routing software had been deployed to only 7 of 8 production servers; the eighth still ran legacy Power Peg code from 2003 that misinterpreted the RLP flag, triggering millions of erroneous market orders. Knight accumulated over $7 billion in unwanted positions before the error was detected and halted. The firm was acquired by Getco LLC in December 2012. The SEC fined Knight $12 million in 2013 and introduced Regulation SCI in 2014.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
East German state-doping program 'State Plan 14.25' (1968-1989)
The East German Sports Medical Service (SMD) systematically doped approximately 10,000 athletes — including roughly 1,500 minors — with anabolic steroids, principally Oral-Turinabol and Mestanolone, under the codename State Plan 14.25. The program ran from 1968 to 1989. SMD head Manfred Höppner and swim-team physician Lothar Kipke were later prosecuted. Shot-put gold medalist Heidi Krieger underwent gender transition she attributed to forced hormone administration. The Stasi Operation Fairy archive was sealed in December 1989 as the regime collapsed. Germany passed compensation legislation in 2002 and 2016 for victims.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Russian state-doping / McLaren Report (2014-18)
At the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, the Russian state operated a urine-substitution system using a tampered sample container passed through a concealed hole in the Sochi anti-doping laboratory wall — the "Disappearing Positive Methodology." RUSADA director Grigory Rodchenkov defected in 2015 and cooperated with investigators. A New York Times exposé by Rebecca Ruiz in May 2016 triggered a WADA independent investigation led by Canadian lawyer Richard McLaren. The McLaren Report (July and December 2016) confirmed a state-orchestrated doping system across more than 30 sports affecting over 1,000 athletes. Russian athletes competed as neutrals at subsequent Games.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsPartially True
GameStop short squeeze (Jan 2021)
In January 2021, retail investors coordinating on Reddit's r/WallStreetBets forum drove GameStop (GME) shares from $17.25 to an intraday peak of $483 on January 28, squeezing Melvin Capital's estimated $5.5 billion short position. On January 28, Robinhood and eight other brokers restricted buying in GME, citing DTCC margin-call requirements. Retail investors alleged that Robinhood's payment-for-order-flow relationship with Citadel Securities — which also provided a $2.75 billion rescue to Melvin Capital — constituted a conflict of interest. The SEC published a 45-page market volatility report in October 2021. Congressional hearings in February 2021 featured Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev, Citadel's Ken Griffin, Reddit's Steve Huffman, and Keith 'Roaring Kitty' Gill.
8 sources4% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Pandora Papers offshore-leak (Oct 3 2021)
On 3 October 2021 the ICIJ and 600+ journalists across 117 countries published findings from 11.9 million documents leaked from 14 offshore service providers operating in jurisdictions including the British Virgin Islands, Panama, Belize, Cyprus, UAE, Switzerland, and Singapore. The Pandora Papers were the largest offshore financial data leak in history at that point. Subjects included 35 current and former world leaders: Tony Blair (avoided £312,000 in stamp duty via an offshore property acquisition), King Abdullah II of Jordan ($106 million in property acquisitions through offshore vehicles), Czech PM Andrej Babiš (purchased a French Riviera château through a BVI chain), Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta and his family, and Putin associates including Konstantin Ernst and Svetlana Krivonogikh.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Paradise Papers offshore-leak (Nov 5 2017)
On 5 November 2017 the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), Süddeutsche Zeitung, and 95 media partners published findings from 13.4 million documents leaked from Appleby (a Bermuda-based offshore law firm), Asiaciti Trust, and 19 corporate registries. The disclosures exposed Apple's tax-minimisation restructuring in Jersey after the EU's 2013 ruling against its Irish structure; Glencore's Democratic Republic of Congo operations; Nike's Bermuda subsidiary arrangements; US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross's undisclosed financial ties to Navigator Holdings and its Russian clients; Queen Elizabeth II's Duchy of Lancaster investments; and Bono's investment in a Lithuanian shopping mall via an offshore vehicle. Approximately 120 politicians were implicated.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
UBS Swiss-bank US tax evasion DPA (2009)
UBS AG, Switzerland's largest bank, admitted in a February 2009 deferred prosecution agreement that it had helped approximately 20,000 US clients evade taxes through secret offshore Swiss accounts. UBS paid $780 million and turned over 4,450 account names. Whistleblower Bradley Birkenfeld received a $104 million IRS award in 2012. The scandal triggered the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) in 2010, the US-Switzerland tax treaty in 2009, and a broader 2013 Swiss bank amnesty programme. Wegelin Bank — Switzerland's oldest — was indicted and closed in 2013.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Enron Corporation accounting fraud and collapse (2001)
Enron Corporation, once the seventh-largest company in the United States, collapsed into bankruptcy on 2 December 2001 after executives used Special Purpose Entities — named Raptor, JEDI, Chewco, LJM1, and LJM2 — to hide more than $30 billion in debt off the balance sheet. CEO Jeffrey Skilling and Chairman Kenneth Lay promoted a fraudulent mark-to-market accounting regime that allowed Enron to book speculative future profits as current income. Stock peaked at $90.75 in August 2000; within 16 months the company was worthless. More than 4,000 employees lost jobs and pensions. The fraud was confirmed by congressional investigations, SEC findings, and criminal convictions.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
FX currency-rate fixing cartel (2007-13, revealed 2013)
Traders at major global banks — including Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Barclays, Royal Bank of Scotland, UBS, Bank of America, and HSBC — coordinated manipulation of the WM/Reuters 4pm London foreign exchange benchmark fix through private Bloomberg chat rooms with names including "The Cartel," "The Bandits Club," and "The Mafia." The conspiracy was revealed by Bloomberg News and investigated by the UK Financial Conduct Authority from June 2013. By May 2015, regulators in the United States, United Kingdom, Switzerland, and elsewhere had imposed $5.6 billion in combined fines. Five banks pleaded guilty to US antitrust violations. The conspiracy ran from approximately 2007 to 2013 and affected the pricing of currencies traded by pension funds, corporations, and sovereign wealth funds worldwide.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
WorldCom accounting fraud (2002)
WorldCom Inc., the second-largest long-distance telecom company in the United States, was revealed in June 2002 to have executed an $11 billion accounting fraud — the largest in US history at the time. Internal auditor Cynthia Cooper and her team discovered that CFO Scott Sullivan and Controller David Myers had misclassified at least $3.8 billion in operating expenses as capital expenditures, artificially inflating reported EBITDA and earnings. CEO Bernie Ebbers was convicted of fraud, conspiracy, and filing false documents (25-year sentence, July 2005). WorldCom filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on 21 July 2002, listing $107 billion in assets — surpassing Enron as the largest US bankruptcy filing to that date.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Archegos Capital Management collapse (Bill Hwang, Mar 2021)
Bill Hwang's Archegos Capital Management, a family office, accumulated approximately $36B in highly leveraged positions via total-return swaps with Credit Suisse, Nomura, Morgan Stanley, UBS, Goldman Sachs, and Wells Fargo — concentrating in ViacomCBS, Discovery, Tencent Music, Baidu, and GSX Techedu. When positions moved against Archegos in late March 2021, margin calls triggered a fire sale that caused $10B+ losses for prime brokers ($5.5B at Credit Suisse alone). Hwang and CFO Patrick Halligan were indicted by the SDNY in April 2022. Hwang was convicted on all 10 counts in July 2024 and sentenced to 18 years in November 2024.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsPartially True
Pfizergate: Ursula von der Leyen / Pfizer Bourla SMS (2021)
In April 2021, a New York Times investigation revealed that European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen had exchanged private text messages with Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla that were instrumental in driving the EU's €71B vaccine contract signed May 2021. The EU Commission refused FOI requests on the grounds that the texts were not official records. EU Ombudsman Emily O'Reilly found maladministration in January 2022. The European Public Prosecutor's Office opened a criminal investigation in January 2023. The European Court of Justice issued a partial ruling in May 2025 ordering some disclosure. Von der Leyen was re-confirmed as Commission President in June 2024.
8 sources4% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
BCCI (Bank of Credit and Commerce International) collapse (Jul 5 1991)
The Bank of Credit and Commerce International — nicknamed "Bank of Crooks and Criminals International" — was founded in 1972 in Karachi by Agha Hasan Abedi with Pakistani backing and operated across 70+ countries. Regulators closed it on 5 July 1991 in a coordinated global shutdown after uncovering massive loan fraud, money laundering for Manuel Noriega, Saddam Hussein, Yasser Arafat, Marcos, and Abu Nidal, and covert use by the CIA and Saudi GID. The Kerry Senate report of December 1992 documented the full scope. Clark Clifford and Robert Altman were prosecuted; Altman acquitted, Clifford too ill to stand trial. Depositors recovered $7.5B in liquidation.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Wells Fargo fake accounts scandal (2002-16)
Between approximately 2002 and 2016, Wells Fargo employees opened roughly 3.5 million unauthorized deposit and credit-card accounts in customers' names to meet aggressive internal sales quotas. The CFPB, OCC, and City of Los Angeles fined the bank $185 million in September 2016. Subsequent enforcement brought the OCC fine to $1 billion and the Federal Reserve imposed an asset cap of $1.95 trillion that remained in place beyond 2024. CEO John Stumpf faced a $41 million compensation clawback and a lifetime industry ban; senior executive Carrie Tolstedt faced a $17 million clawback and DOJ criminal charges under a deferred prosecution agreement. The scandal is confirmed corporate fraud, not a conspiracy theory — the underlying conduct is thoroughly documented in regulatory findings and court filings.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Boeing 737 MAX MCAS cover-up (Lion Air JT610 + Ethiopian ET302)
Boeing's 737 MAX was involved in two fatal crashes: Lion Air Flight JT610 (29 October 2018, 189 killed) and Ethiopian Airlines Flight ET302 (10 March 2019, 157 killed), totalling 346 deaths. Investigations identified the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS) as the cause. MCAS relied on a single angle-of-attack (AOA) sensor, a design feature not fully disclosed to airlines or pilots in training materials. Internal messages from Boeing test pilot Mark Forkner, revealed in 2019, described manipulating FAA regulators — "jedi mind tricks" — to avoid simulator-training requirements. Boeing paid $2.5 billion under a January 2021 DOJ deferred prosecution agreement for conspiracy to defraud the FAA. Forkner was indicted in October 2021 but acquitted by a Texas jury in March 2022. A January 2024 door-plug blowout on Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 renewed scrutiny; the DOJ found Boeing in breach of its DPA in May 2024.
8 sources5% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsPartially True
Adani Group / Hindenburg Research report (24 Jan 2023)
On 24 January 2023, US short-seller Hindenburg Research published an 88-question report alleging that the Adani Group — the Indian conglomerate controlled by Gautam Adani — had engaged in stock manipulation, accounting fraud, and illegal parking of shares through a network of offshore entities in Mauritius, the UAE, and the Cayman Islands. The report triggered a market-cap decline exceeding $150 billion across Adani group companies. India's Securities and Exchange Board (SEBI) opened an investigation that remained ongoing through 2025. A 2023 OCCRP investigation separately linked offshore entities to Gautam Adani's brother Vinod Adani. Hindenburg itself shut down in January 2025. The verdict is partially true: the market reaction and offshore structure allegations have documented basis; the stock manipulation and accounting fraud charges were neither fully proven nor fully refuted by regulators as of mid-2026.
8 sources3% confidencebeing upgraded
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Terra/Luna algorithmic stablecoin collapse (Do Kwon, 2022)
TerraUSD (UST) was an algorithmic stablecoin designed by Terraform Labs and its CEO Do Kwon. In May 2022, the UST peg collapsed, triggering a "death spiral" that wiped approximately $40 billion in market value within days. The SEC filed fraud charges in February 2023. Do Kwon was arrested in Montenegro in March 2023 and extradited to the United States in 2025. Evidence at trial showed Kwon and colleagues had privately known the stablecoin mechanism was fragile and had concealed its prior near-collapse in May 2021.
15 sources5% confidencefully sourced
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
FTX customer-fund commingling and Alameda backdoor (2019-22)
FTX, the cryptocurrency exchange founded by Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF), secretly transferred billions in customer deposits to its affiliated trading firm Alameda Research, which used the funds for investments, loans to executives, and political donations. When Alameda's balance sheet leaked in November 2022, a bank run ensued and FTX collapsed. SBF was convicted on seven counts of fraud and conspiracy in November 2023 and sentenced to 25 years. Testimony from co-conspirators Caroline Ellison and Gary Wang confirmed the Alameda auto-liquidation exemption and the deliberate nature of the commingling.
15 sources5% confidencefully sourced
Finance & EconomicsPartially True
Tether (USDT) reserve-composition concealment (2017-present)
Tether Limited, issuer of the USDT stablecoin, claimed for years that each USDT was backed 1:1 by US dollars held in reserve. Investigations by the New York Attorney General (settled February 2021, $18.5M) and the CFTC (settled October 2021, $41M) confirmed that Tether had misrepresented its reserves — backing was at times composed of commercial paper, loans to Bitfinex, and other non-cash assets rather than pure dollar reserves. Tether produces periodic attestations but has never undergone a full independent audit. The stablecoin continues to operate and is the largest by market cap.
15 sources4% confidencefully sourced
Finance & EconomicsPartially True
Mt. Gox 850k BTC loss: insider theft vs malleability hack (2014)
Mt. Gox, once the world's largest Bitcoin exchange, collapsed in February 2014 after announcing the loss of approximately 850,000 BTC (then ~$450M; worth billions at later prices). CEO Mark Karpelès initially claimed transaction malleability attacks were responsible. Independent blockchain forensics firm WizSec attributed the losses to systematic key theft beginning in 2011. Karpelès was convicted in March 2019 for data falsification — not theft. Alexander Vinnik, operator of BTC-e (a money laundering exchange), was indicted in 2017 for receiving proceeds of the Mt. Gox theft. The true mechanism remains partially contested.
15 sources3% confidencefully sourced
Finance & EconomicsDebunked
SVB collapse: short-seller conspiracy vs duration mismatch (2023)
Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) collapsed on 10 March 2023 in the second-largest US bank failure in history. Conspiracy claims attributed the failure to coordinated short-selling campaigns or deliberate destabilisation by financial actors. Federal Reserve, FDIC, and congressional investigations attributed the collapse to SVB's concentration of approximately $91 billion in long-duration mortgage-backed securities purchased at near-zero interest rates, which lost market value as rates rose. When SVB announced a $1.8 billion realised loss from selling securities on 9 March, a Twitter-accelerated bank run ensued. Short-seller conspiracy claims are unsupported.
12 sources5% confidencefully sourced
Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Vatican Bank, Banco Ambrosiano, and the Death of Roberto Calvi
Roberto Calvi, chairman of Banco Ambrosiano — Italy's largest private bank — was found hanging from Blackfriars Bridge in London on 18 June 1982. The initial ruling of suicide was overturned and the case reopened as murder in 2002. Banco Ambrosiano collapsed days after Calvi's death; $1.3 billion in unsecured loans had been made to shell companies controlled by or connected to the Istituto per le Opere di Religione (IOR — the Vatican Bank). Archbishop Paul Marcinkus, head of the IOR, was indicted by Italian prosecutors in 1987; the Vatican refused extradition citing sovereign immunity. The IOR settled with Ambrosiano creditors for $250 million in 1984 without admitting liability. The P2 Masonic Lodge (Licio Gelli) provided an additional layer of documented conspiracy. Multiple Italian parliamentary inquiries, international banking investigations, and journalist accounts — including Gerald Posner's *God's Bankers* — establish this as a confirmed financial and institutional conspiracy.
12 sources92% confidencefully sourced
Finance & EconomicsPartially True
WEF / Davos Great Reset (Specific)
In June 2020, Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum (WEF) published "The Great Reset" agenda — a real document proposing a COVID-19 recovery framework centred on sustainability, stakeholder capitalism, and digital infrastructure. The conspiracy framing holds that "The Great Reset" is a coordinated globalist plan for world takeover, secretly being implemented by governments and corporations in concert with the WEF. What is true: the document and agenda exist, WEF does convene world leaders and executives at Davos, and specific policy proposals within it (central bank digital currencies, digital ID frameworks, ESG disclosure mandates) are active real-world policy debates. What is not supported: the existence of a secret implementation timeline, the claim that governments are covertly executing a WEF master plan, or that Schwab secretly controls heads of state. The ADL has documented that some variants of the WEF conspiracy invoke antisemitic-adjacent framings around Schwab's identity.
12 sources82% confidencefully sourced