Current:Home > StocksStudy: Someone bet against the Israeli stock market in the days before Hamas' Oct. 7 attack -WealthTrail Solutions
Study: Someone bet against the Israeli stock market in the days before Hamas' Oct. 7 attack
View
Date:2025-04-18 19:03:04
Five days before the deadliest attack in Israel's history, a warning may have appeared on stock exchanges.
A study by researchers from Columbia University and NYU called "Trading on Terror?" suggests that a trader may have been aware of the coming attack, bet against the Israeli economy and walked away with a profit by short selling on the U.S. and Israeli stock exchanges.
Short selling is a trading strategy aimed at making a profit off an asset that is expected to drop in price; the seller "borrows" a security and sells it on the open market with the goal of buying it back later at a lower price and pocketing the difference.
The study looked at the Israel Exchange-Traded Fund, a common way for people to make investments in Israel, which on any given day has around 2,000 shares shorted. According to the researchers, on Oct. 2, that number shot up to over 227,000 shares.
According to Columbia Law School Professor Joshua Mitts, one of the authors of the study, "that's extremely unusual." It was also profitable: the shares sold short for one Israeli company alone yielded a profit of "millions" of Israeli shekels.
The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange on Tuesday denied that any investors profited by having advance knowledge of the Oct. 7 attack and said the Columbia study is flawed, Reuters reported. Yaniv Pagot, head of trading at the exchange, said the researchers miscalculated the profits short-sellers earned in the months leading up to the attack, according to the wire service.
"I don't see in the data something even close to what they wrote in the paper," Pagot told Reuters. "There was nothing unusual in short positions in the stock exchange in the two months before the attack."
In a response to the criticism, Mitts said the paper had been updated to reflect the exchange's contention that the researchers had erred by using shekels — Israel's currency — to calculate short-sale profits rather than agorot, a smaller denomination used to indicate share prices in Israel.
"As the Israel Securities Authority acknowledges, short sellers trading just before October 7 earned tens of millions of [shekels] in profits on one [Tel Aviv Stock Exchange] security alone, and the ISA's investigation did not address the short selling in the Israel ETF or short-dated options described in our paper," Mitts said in a statement to CBS News. "We hope regulators in Israel and around the world will continue to examine these troubling trading patterns."
Mitts and his co-author, Professor Robert J. Jackson Jr., ran a number of comparisons over the past 13 years to see whether the same thing had happened before other major moments of instability in Israel, like the 2014 Israel-Gaza war, the COVID-19 pandemic, or the judicial reform initiative that led huge crowds of Israelis to take to the streets in protest.
They found that the short-selling activity in early October was "really extraordinary, even when you compare it to those periods of instability, which there were many."
Something similar had happened before, though — on April 3, a couple of days before the Jewish holiday of Passover. The study links this to an Israeli media report claiming Hamas had initially planned its attack for the eve of Passover.
"It's almost the same magnitude. What are the odds?" asks Mitts.
"The other thing we know," he adds, "is that this looks to have been the product of a single trader, based on what we can see in the data. This is extraordinarily unusual."
All of this led them to their conclusion that the trades were not a coincidence, but a tactic by someone who knew the attack was coming.
"We think it's virtually impossible this happened by chance," Mitts told CBS News.
Finding out exactly who made the trades, and the profit, would be "exceedingly difficult," and Mitts says he is "pretty pessimistic" that whoever was betting against the Israeli economy will be found. Similarly, Mitts says it's "not so easy to stop this sort of trading" from happening. Instead, he suggests a different goal.
"What we really need to be asking is how do we internalize this sort of trading information in the public consciousness, from an intelligence standpoint, from a public discussions standpoint, from a policy standpoint. What are these signals? What are they teaching us?"
There is growing evidence of the massive intelligence failures that preceded the Oct. 7 attacks. An Israeli soldier told CBS News last week that her team reported unusual activity on the Gaza side of the border beginning six months before the attack to her superiors in the IDF, but "they didn't take anything seriously."
Mitts says this study shows yet another missed signal: "The stock market was screaming, "There's something going on!""
In response to the study, the Israel Securities Authority has said: "The matter is known to the authority and is under investigation by all the relevant parties."
"I don't mean to say we found the next prediction of the future," Mitts says, but he believes their work points to a tool that must be incorporated into the intelligence arsenal. "We shouldn't have to write the paper two months later that reveals this."
Editor's note: This story has been updated with comments from Yaniv Pagot at the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange and Prof. Mitts' response.
- In:
- Hamas
- Israel
- Tel Aviv
- New York Stock Exchange
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Elon Musk’s Daughter Vivian Calls Him “Absolutely Pathetic” and a “Serial Adulterer”
- Taylor Swift shocker: New album, The Tortured Poets Department, is actually a double album
- AP Was There: Shock, then terror as Columbine attack unfolds
- Here’s how to smooth eye wrinkles, according to a plastic surgeon
- Mega Millions winning numbers for August 6 drawing: Jackpot climbs to $398 million
- The Vermont Legislature Considers ‘Superfund’ Legislation to Compensate for Climate Change
- To fix roster woes, Patriots counting on new approach in first post-Bill Belichick NFL draft
- Orlando Bloom Shares How Katy Perry Supports His Wildest Dreams
- Your Wedding Guests Will Thank You if You Get Married at These All-Inclusive Resorts
- Mandisa, Grammy-winning singer and ‘American Idol’ alum, dies at 47
Ranking
- NCAA hands former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh a 4-year show cause order for recruiting violations
- Firefighters douse a blaze at a historic Oregon hotel famously featured in ‘The Shining’
- US sanctions fundraisers for extremist West Bank settlers who commit violence against Palestinians
- Taylor Swift seems to have dropped two new songs about Kim Kardashian
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Apple pulls WhatsApp and Threads from App Store on Beijing’s orders
- How do I apply for Social Security for the first time?
- Florida baffles experts by banning local water break rules as deadly heat is on the rise
Recommendation
Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
Tennessee teacher arrested after bringing guns to preschool, threatening co-worker, police say
Best lines from each of Taylor Swift's 'Tortured Poets Department' songs, Pt. 1 & 2
What Each Zodiac Sign Needs for Taurus Season, According to Your Horoscope
Meet 11-year-old skateboarder Zheng Haohao, the youngest Olympian competing in Paris
3 Northern California law enforcement officers charged in death of man held facedown on the ground
EPA designates 2 forever chemicals as hazardous substances, eligible for Superfund cleanup
Dubious claims about voting flyers at a migrant camp show how the border is inflaming US politics