Sep 25, 2024
Paul Pelosi CAUGHT Dumping Stock Before DOJ's MAJOR MOVE
Paul Pelosi alleged unloaded $500,000 worth of Visa stock weeks before the DOJ charged them with violating anti-trust laws.
- 11 minutes
Turns out, Nancy Pelosi's husband
dumped a whopping $500,000 in visa stock
right before the Department of Justice
filed suit against the company.
Now, this is an ongoing saga
with the Pelosi's.
[00:00:16]
Right.
Allegations of insider trading,
allegations that Nancy Pelosi
will have some briefings.
She'll have information that the rest
of the public is not privy to.
And wow, wouldn't you know it.
Suddenly that information
is being used to, you know, make decisions
[00:00:33]
about stock trades, allegedly.
Now, I say allegedly
because no one's really cared enough
to actually fully investigate this.
But it is interesting
how time and time again,
the Pelosi seem to engage in, you know,
stock trading that is beneficial to them
[00:00:51]
based on policies or lawsuits that are
being implemented by the government.
So let's get into the details.
But before we get into the details about
what the Pelosi's are up to, I think it's
important to understand this DOJ lawsuit.
So basically,
[00:01:07]
the Justice Department is currently
alleging that visa has violated antitrust
laws by imposing exclusionary agreements
that penalize merchants who wish
to use alternative payment processors,
and that creates a monopoly.
[00:01:23]
At least that's what Merrick Garland,
the attorney general,
is alleging here as part of this lawsuit.
Now, he also argues that this ends
up harming consumers because the merchant
fees are then passed on to the consumers.
So visa requires volume commitments from
merchants and their financial institutions
[00:01:42]
that force them to use visa
for most of their card transactions
or face steeper fees.
These agreements are priced
so that unless all or nearly all debit
volume runs over Visa's payment rails,
large disloyalty penalties can be imposed
on all visa transactions,
[00:02:01]
according to the Justice Department.
So currently the investigators are looking
into Visa's relationship with companies
such as square, stripe and also PayPal.
And according to The Wall Street Journal,
visa is alleged to have offered those
[00:02:17]
specific companies financial incentives
to prevent the firms from using
other competitive payment processors.
So that's the allegation here.
So for example, visa, allegedly,
according to the Justice Department,
coerced PayPal to encourage its customers
to make payments using visa branded cards.
[00:02:38]
Now, here is Attorney General
Merrick Garland elaborating more
on what the allegations are.
Visa knows it is a, quote, must carry
network for banks and merchants alike.
That means all merchants and banks
must contract with visa, because
[00:02:55]
certain purchases using a visa debit card
can only be completed through its network.
Visa uses that leverage to get banks
and merchants to agree to what are known
as quote volume requirements.
These provisions require banks
and merchants to direct a large amount
[00:03:13]
of their transactions to visa,
or else face higher fees.
As a result, when merchants weigh
the decision of which electronic payment
network to use for a given transaction,
they cannot choose the authorized network
with the lowest price
[00:03:29]
or the best offering for that transaction.
Instead, they operate under the threat
that if they do not process enough
of their payments through visa,
they will face exorbitant fees
on all visa debt transactions.
[00:03:45]
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Now, this is probably why Visa's payment
systems account for more than 60% of
[00:04:05]
debit transactions in the United States,
so they have really found a way to.
If these allegations are proven
to be true, scheme their way to the top
and essentially create a monopoly
in this business.
Now, the Justice Department argues
that visa effectively paid off potential
[00:04:22]
competitors before they could even develop
the scale to compete in earnest.
We see this happen
in other sectors of the economy as well.
Merrick Garland cited a series of
agreements with payments company square,
citing an executive saying visa has
the smaller firm, quote, on a short leash.
[00:04:42]
I'm sure they do.
Now, visa collects $7 billion in fees
from merchants annually,
and they also reported an $8.9 billion
in revenue in their most recent quarter.
Now that's insane.
[00:04:59]
And it also represents a 10%
increase year over year.
So I'm very curious to see
how this DOJ antitrust suit plays out.
This isn't the first time
visa has been accused of, you know,
breaking or violating antitrust laws.
[00:05:15]
They've paid some settlements in the past.
The outcome of this suit could be
different, but I wouldn't hold my breath.
We'll just wait and see what happens.
Now, with all of that in mind, let's get
to Paul Pelosi and the stock trading
that happened a few months prior
to this suit becoming public knowledge.
[00:05:33]
So, less than three months prior
to the DOJ announcing this lawsuit.
Nancy Pelosi's husband
sold a lot of visa stock.
So Christopher Josephs, who's a tech
entrepreneur who runs the Nancy Pelosi
[00:05:49]
Stock Trade Tracker on X,
we've talked about this account before.
It's amazing.
Well, he posted a screenshot
of a congressional filing on July 3rd,
which showed that the former
House speaker's husband,
Paul Pelosi, had sold 2000 shares of visa
worth between half a million
[00:06:07]
and $1 million.
So at the time that he made this
transaction, there was no public knowledge
that the DOJ was going
to pursue a lawsuit against visa.
So, like, how could Paul Pelosi know?
I mean, maybe it was
just a lucky coincidence.
[00:06:24]
Except that's not really the case.
There were already whispers,
already rumors that the DOJ
was going to pursue this suit.
So let's go to the Financial Times,
which reports that visa in 2021,
disclosed in a regulatory filing
that the DOJ's antitrust unit
[00:06:43]
had requested information on potential
violations of antitrust law provisions
that outlaw anti-competitive agreements
and monopolistic conduct.
The civil probe focused on Visa's debit
card businesses in the United States,
[00:06:59]
as well as competition
in other networks and payment methods.
So dating all the way back to 2021,
you had the DOJ ask
for certain information from visa.
Basically tipping them off
that there is an impending lawsuit.
All right. I think we got caught.
[00:07:15]
And.
Are we going to really insult ourselves
into thinking that there was there
was no conversation happening in Congress
about pursuing a suit against visa,
that Nancy Pelosi and Paul Pelosi
knew nothing about this.
[00:07:31]
Like, this isn't the first time
this has happened.
This keeps happening.
The Pelosi's keep engaging
in like stock trading.
They keep dumping stocks or buying stocks
right before a major news story breaks
[00:07:47]
about a policy being implemented
or a lawsuit being pursued.
If you look at the performance
of their stock portfolio, it outperforms
the S&P 500 again and again and again.
And I just refuse to believe
that the Pelosi's are somehow geniuses.
[00:08:06]
I mean, the most successful in predicting
how the markets are going to react And
look, even if there's no wrongdoing here,
and I don't buy that for a second,
it gives the impression that there
[00:08:22]
is bad behavior taking place,
that there is corruption taking place.
And to be sure,
when you have members of Congress
or their immediate family members
benefiting from insider information or
benefiting in the stock market based
on the policies that are being implemented
[00:08:42]
by our members of Congress,
we've got an issue.
There's a huge conflict of interest there,
because think about it, guys.
If you are invested in, let's say, Disney,
you invested in some Disney stock,
but there's a bill on your desk
about potentially reining in
[00:08:59]
some of Disney's behavior
which could cut into their profits.
You're gonna you're gonna vote
in favor of that legislation
if your House leadership, are you going
to even bring that bill up for a vote?
It's a huge issue.
It's a huge conflict of interest.
[00:09:17]
Politicians on both sides
of the political aisle engage in this.
Nancy Pelosi gets a lot of attention
because she seems to engage in it
more than other politicians in Congress.
But this is wrong.
And the ridiculous bad faith efforts
to rein this in.
[00:09:36]
Just not enough.
Obviously, we need to do something
to ensure that our members of Congress
are working on behalf of the people,
not on behalf of themselves,
not on behalf of their stock portfolio.
[00:09:51]
And we just can't ensure that if they're
able to trade individual stocks.
Nancy Pelosi says that members of Congress
should be able to participate
in the free market.
I disagree with that.
I think if you're a member of Congress,
you have made a decision
to be a public servant.
That means making sacrifices,
something that our members of Congress
[00:10:10]
forgot they were supposed to do
in order to serve the people.
All they think they're supposed to do
is serve themselves.
And if you look at how much wealth
these members of Congress have accumulated
while serving
as United States Congress people, it's
very obvious they're serving themselves.
[00:10:27]
I mean, it's incredible
how rich Nancy Pelosi has gotten
while being in politics all her life.
Her salary ain't that big.
People don't become, you know, I mean,
she's worth nine figures at this point.
[00:10:44]
If you are simply a United States
congresswoman and that's where you're
making the most of your income,
you're not going to be worth that much.
So I think it's about time the American
people, regardless of what your political
affiliation is like, get together and
demand more from our system of government.
[00:11:05]
Trading individual stocks
is another form of corruption,
and it's become so normalized
that some people don't even question it.
It's time to question it.
It's time for them to actually behave as
public servants, as opposed to greedy pigs
who trade on insider information.
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