13 results for “The Federal Reserve Conspiracy”
The theory that President John F. Kennedy was not killed by a lone gunman but was the victim of a coordinated conspiracy involving elements of the CIA, Mafia, military-industrial complex, or other powerful groups.
The theory that the Federal Reserve System is a private institution controlled by banking elites that manipulates the money supply, interest rates, and economic cycles for the benefit of the wealthy at the expense of ordinary citizens.
The theory that cryptocurrency markets are systematically manipulated by whales, exchanges, and stablecoin issuers, with Tether (USDT) allegedly printing unbacked tokens to artificially inflate Bitcoin's price.
Major international banks including Barclays, UBS, Deutsche Bank, and Rabobank colluded to manipulate the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), which underpins over $300 trillion in financial contracts worldwide. Traders coordinated via chat rooms to rig rates for profit. Exposed 2012; $9+ billion in fines; four convictions.
The 2008 financial crisis response — the $700B TARP, $182B AIG bailout, and Federal Reserve emergency lending — is subject to confirmed and contested claims: bank executives knew of subprime risk and profited anyway; "too big to fail" was institutionalized; regulatory capture was documented.
Claims that cashless payments or central bank digital currencies are designed to surveil, freeze, or socially score all citizens.
The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), created by executive order in January 2025 with Elon Musk as a senior advisory figure, identified real inefficiencies and duplicate payments in federal contracting. A conspiracy framing built on this foundation claims that DOGE uncovered explosive evidence of trillions in hidden slush funds or systemic fraud that is being suppressed by the deep state, congressional leadership, or the administrative bureaucracy. GAO and Inspector General reports confirm real but limited waste findings; the "suppression of explosive revelations" framing is unsubstantiated.
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.
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.
On 24 November 2014 a group calling itself the 'Guardians of Peace' launched a wiper attack against Sony Pictures Entertainment, destroying approximately 70% of the company's corporate data. Around 100 terabytes of internal data were exfiltrated prior to the wipe, including executive emails, employee salary data, personal information, and unreleased films. The attack was linked to Sony's forthcoming comedy 'The Interview', which satirised North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. The FBI attributed the attack to North Korea on 19 December 2014. A 2018 DOJ indictment named Park Jin Hyok, a member of North Korea's Lazarus Group (Unit 180), for the Sony attack and also for WannaCry and the Bangladesh Bank heist.
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.
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.
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.