ISIS makes millions playing foreign markets with stolen cash, analysts say
The Islamic State terror group is raking in up to $20 million a month by playing foreign currency markets under the noses of unsuspecting officials – all with cash that was looted from banks, financial analysts told British lawmakers Wednesday.
The crafty terrorists are making huge returns on currency speculation, which involves buying and selling currencies to make profits from favorable exchange rates.
The profits are then wired back through unsuspecting financial officials in Iraq and Jordan, the British parliamentary committee was told. In 2014, U.S. officials estimated ISIS raked in $1 million each day from oil smuggling alone, and another $20 million that year from kidnappings and ransom payments.
During a 2014 takeover of Mosul, ISIS looted around $429 million from the city’s central bank.
"The cash that Isil has looted, along with siphoned off pension payments, is routed into Jordanian banks and brought back into the system via Baghdad," said John Baron, the Foreign Affairs sub-committee's chair. "That allows the system to be exploited by Isil, in that they take a turn (profit) on the foreign currency actions and siphon that cash back."
The money gets into the terror group's hands through informal “Hawala” transfers, an unregulated system where cash payments are made between agents in one country after an equal amount is presented as collateral in another, the Telegraph reports.