As part of the debt ceiling deal, one
surprise concession that made it into the bill was the approval of the Mountain
Valley Pipeline, a 304-mile natural gas connection from northwest West Virginia
to southern Virginia.
A pet project of West Virginia Sen. Joe
Manchin that had been mired in Congress, the law forces action on permits that
should push the project forward.
However, there was no public reason to
believe that the pipeline was in the deal at all, which makes the actions of
one mystery trader — who made a killing on its inclusion — somewhat suspicious,
according to a Bloomberg analysis of trading data.
Shares in Equitrans Midstream Corporation
were down 35% last year. On May 24, a few days before an agreement was struck,
a mystery trader bought 100,000 call options — essentially bets on a
stock-price increase — on Equitrans Midstream. Then, on May 27, the debt deal
including the Mountain Valley Pipeline was struck.
Following that announcement, Equitrans
Midstream shares jumped 49%.
From the looks of it, the bet earned the
trader $7.5 million as of last Friday, according to Bloomberg. The options are
still outstanding, so that number could grow in the event that Equitrans
Midstream continues to rally.
That kind of perfect timing is, needless to
say, fishy. The deal on Mountain Valley was kept secret up until the debt deal
was announced. Some are suspicious enough they want it investigated for
potential insider trading.
Equitrans said neither they nor any executives
were involved in the transactions. Manchin himself said he knew nothing about
the options trade. The negotiations were played very close to the vest between
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and the White House. Ethics watchdogs want
answers, according to Bloomberg.
Members of Congress are barred from trading
on confidential information, though a 2021 Insider investigation found repeated
violations of the STOCK Act among members.

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