The Journal. - The Bank Collapse Behind Iran's Protests
Episode Date: January 15, 2026For the past two weeks, Iran has been consumed by protests that have resulted in a heavy government crackdown with deaths estimated in the thousands. But the prelude to the unrest wasn’t just politi...cal. It stemmed from a deep financial crisis, and specifically, as WSJ’s Jared Malsin explains, the collapse of an obscure and indebted bank. Jessica Mendoza hosts. Further Listening: - Iran Retaliates After U.S. Strike. How Could This End? - Iran May Be Running Out of Options Sign up for WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Iran is facing a kind of revolutionary situation.
This is the most significant challenge that the regime in Iran has faced since it came into
existence after its last revolution in 1979.
Our colleague Jared Moussin covers the Middle East, and he's been following the unrest in Iran
for the past two weeks.
There have been enormous protests throughout the country.
And there's been a very severe crackdown in which hundreds, if not thousands of people appear to have been killed in the last few days.
And you're seeing a very real risk that the regime could fall out of power.
And everyone is holding their breath to see what's going to happen next.
Unlike other flashpoints in the country's history, the biggest factor in the unraveling situation in Iran today isn't political instability or demand.
for more personal freedom.
Instead, the unrest stems mainly
from a major financial crisis.
Iran has obviously been under international
U.S.-led sanctions for many years,
which means its economy is under severe strain.
That totally isolates Iran,
cuts off the banking system from the rest of the world,
and has put it in this very unstable situation to begin with.
And the first sign that Iran had reached a turning point
was the failure of a bank.
One of the largest banks in Iran collapsed.
And that was a warning sign
that the entire financial system was in crisis.
Welcome to The Journal,
our show about money, business, and power.
I'm Jessica Mendoza.
It's Thursday, January 15th.
Coming up on the show,
how the collapse of a bank
sent Iran into a tailspin.
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Iran's current financial crisis has its roots in 2018. During President Trump's first
term.
I am announcing today that the United States will withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal.
The Iran nuclear deal, brokered by the Obama administration, was meant to curb the country's
nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief.
Trump reversed course and took a hard line against Iran.
We will be instituting the highest level of the
of economic sanction.
Any nation that helps Iran in its quest for nuclear weapons
could also be strongly sanctioned by the United States.
That cut off Iran from the world financial system
and made it this kind of closed system almost
where it was very, very isolated,
and it put its financial system under a lot of strain.
The renewed sanctions meant that Iran's banks
couldn't do business with the outside world.
For example, it is cut off from the swift payment system.
The central bank is under sanctions.
Several other Iranian banks are under sanctions.
So this is a country that cannot borrow internationally.
It cannot do trade normally.
It cannot sell its oil freely.
And it is deeply, deeply isolated.
To put it simply, money stopped flowing into Iran's bank.
In the years that followed, the Iranian government came up with workarounds to try to keep its economy afloat.
For example, Iran's oil industry has had to increasingly rely on a so-called shadow fleet of tankers to export oil abroad.
That kept some money flowing to the state's coffers.
Iran also used a workaround for its banks, turning to banks in Iraq for access to cash.
But that practice became a lot tougher after a U.S. crackdown in 2023.
These pressures forced Iranian banks to rely more on its own government.
And that created a situation where you have the central bank propping up this entire system,
something like 70% of Iran's banks were government controlled to some degree.
That's according to an analysis by a former IMF official that I spoke to by 2019,
which is when things started to come a part of the,
the seams. Iran's central bank used an emergency loan program to support the country's banking
system. The loans charged high interest rates, but didn't require banks to provide any collateral.
In order to fund these loans, Iran's central bank printed money, which raised concerns about
inflation and the weakening of Iran's currency, the Rial. And the lender that became an emblem
of this risky system was called Ayande Bank. Right. So Ayanda Bank is,
a microcosm of these compound economic problems. It is a bank that was formed in 2013 by a guy named
Ali Ansari, who is from what's believed to be one of Iran's richest families. He's close to the
conservative establishment. And he founded this bank that offered the highest interest rates on the
market. And it was also heavily dependent on the central bank.
So Ayande borrows all this money from the central bank.
What does it do with it?
Well, what the bank was doing is that it was basically acting as a kind of piggy bank
for these lavish real estate projects, especially malls.
Malls like shopping malls?
That's right.
In particular, this one huge mall called the Iran Mall,
which is in northwest Tehran,
and is believed to be one of the largest shopping companies.
complexes in the world.
It has a hall of mirrors that is modeled after a Persian imperial palace.
It has a car showroom.
It has movie theaters.
It has a library.
You know, so it has like, you know, sports complexes.
It's sort of like a city within a city.
But here's the thing.
The Iran Mall was built by the same guy who founded Ayanda Bank, Ali Ansari.
So by investing in the Iran Mall, Ansari's bank was effectively lending money to his own company.
money that came from the Iranian government.
You have this bank that's acting almost like a slush fund
to fund this kind of garish shopping center
that was a symbol of how these regime-connected elites
are just moving this money around to enrich themselves.
What one of the senior officials at the Iranian Central Bank
said last year is that Ayanda Bank was operating a Ponzi scheme.
That is to say they were,
were loaning out more money than they could possibly repay.
And that's what you have in a Ponzi scheme
where you have a bank that is giving out loans
that it cannot repay, essentially,
and playing a shell game by moving that money around.
The whole system started to unravel last year
when Iran was hit with another major crisis.
We start with the breaking news at this hour,
as Israel has carried out strikes on Iran's nuclear program.
Last June, Israel bombed military facilities in Iran
and kicked off a 12-day war.
Iranian missiles targeted multiple cities in Israel overnight
with Batyam hit the hardest.
Last night, a fleet of American warplanes
flew halfway around the world
and dropped more than a dozen 30,000-pound bombs
on Iran's main nuclear facilities.
While the conflict was short-lived,
it was a huge blow to Iran's economy.
The Iranian government had to increase its military spending
to rebuild destroyed air defenses and stock-upon missiles,
which added to the strain on the country's funds.
And the war also had an impact on Iranians themselves.
It made them really anxious,
anxious that there could be more attacks
and that the economy would tank.
Money was leaving the country,
and Iranians themselves were taking their money out of the national.
national currency, the real. They're dumping the real. They're putting it in gold, in dollars, in euros.
One economist that I spoke to estimated that between 10 and 20 billion dollars in capital flight
took place last year. And it triggered this currency crisis. The real fell roughly 84% over the course
of the year. So it just heaped more pressure on a system that was already on.
under a lot of stress.
The currency crisis put a target on Ayanda bank.
Some politicians worried for years
that Iran's central bank was printing too much money
to support Ayande at a time when inflation was soaring.
Now, they wanted it closed.
In October, the central bank announced
that Ayanda would be shut down.
In a statement, Ayanda bank's founder, Ali Ansari,
blamed the bank's failure on, quote,
decisions and policies made beyond the bank's control.
Days after the collapse, the United Kingdom sanctioned Ansari, calling him a, quote, corrupt Iranian banker and businessman.
Ayanda bank had reached its end.
But for the Iranian government, the crisis was just beginning.
That's next.
After the collapse of Ayanda at the end of 2025, how bad was the Iranian economy?
What did it look like for everyday Iranians?
It was bad.
You know, when you have a currency that loses,
84% of its value in one year, your ability to go buy groceries is going to collapse.
I mean, one example that someone gave me is that the restaurants and shops,
that people had no idea how to put prices on their menus.
Because when you have a currency that's declining every single day and every single hour,
people don't even know how much to charge for things.
Like, it's cheaper not to even open your shop if you're just going to lose money on
you know, on the energy and on the stocking your shelves and so on.
The collapse of Ayande Bank made things even worse.
The bank left behind a massive pile of debt
that became the responsibility of the Iranian government,
which was already strapped for cash.
In December, the government announced that it would be making serious budget cuts.
The government, led by President Pajaskian,
introduced this budget at the end of December
that was essentially going to remove
subsidies on bread, for example, on gasoline,
and it pointed to the fact that the government was out of money.
When you're talking about cuts on subsidies to bread and gasoline,
those are things that are going to really hit ordinary people harder.
These proposed austerity measures added up to a $10 billion cut in subsidies.
For many Iranians, this was the last straw.
That was really the immediate trigger
of these protests, because the government had to come out in say, in numbers,
okay, we have to cut back, we have no other choice.
Hundreds of merchants, who don't typically join mass protests,
took to the streets of Tehran.
In an effort to mollify protesters,
the government introduced a monthly cash subsidy of 10 million reals per person.
That's the equivalent of about seven U.S. dollars.
But it's sort of too little, too late.
they're trying to fight a fire that has already consumed them.
Can you talk about the scale of these protests, how they grew in the past few weeks?
Right. So they have spiraled to pull in a wide cross-section of Iranian society.
You had protests in cities across the periphery in all kinds of regions in Balochistan and the Kurdish areas in Tehran itself.
Very importantly, these protests in the city of Mashhad, which is more religious, more conservative,
which shows that some of the core constituents that would normally support the system as a whole,
support the Islamic Republic that those people are protesting.
That is why it is a situation that is challenging the system as a whole.
And how has the Iranian government responded?
They have also launched a crackdown.
There's been this very deadly, very consistent.
concerning crackdown on protesters where you've had hundreds, if not thousands of people killed.
And you've seen the videos circulating that we've reported also of the bodies piling up in morgues.
And that's what our newsroom is focused on now, is trying to figure out how many people were killed, how many people died.
Human rights activists in Iran, a watchdog group, said it confirmed the deaths of more than
2,600 people and more than 18,000 arrests.
Officials in the region have said they'd seen a drop in protest activity recently,
and residents reported an eerie quiet after days of violence.
But it's hard to tell exactly what's happening,
because the Iran government has imposed a near-total communications blackout.
There's virtually no internet access in the country at all.
We're going to get the story out eventually,
and we're going to find out just how many people are dead in what looks to be,
one of the worst, most lethal acts of political mass killing in recent years.
For days, President Trump has threatened to take action against Iran if it killed protesters.
On Wednesday, he said that Iran had stopped killing people.
You mentioned several times that a lot of what happened in the last year and what led ultimately
to what's going on now and what happened in December.
It's a story of what happens when a country is totally isolated.
especially financially.
Was this inevitable?
Was there anything the Iranian government
could have done to prevent this from happening?
That's a great question.
I think, you know,
what a lot of analysts have said
is that Iran's government
drove itself into a perfect storm
of factors that caused this crisis,
where you have this underlying banking crisis
and a weak financial system,
a war with a more powerful neighbor.
And then a lot of Iranians are looking at this situation saying,
okay, what was all this money spent on?
Like, what was the point of all this?
And meanwhile, right, they can't afford bread.
Yeah, exactly.
And then, you know, it's just part of how a country like this stays afloat
is ordinary people participate in the economy.
You know, like you go to work every day, you go to school, you open your shop.
and if you can't do that anymore,
that's when that starts to come apart at the scenes.
What comes next is completely uncertain and unpredictable.
That's all for today, Thursday, January 15th.
The Journal is a co-production of Spotify and the Wall Street Journal.
Additional reporting in this episode from David S. Cloud and Ben Welfo Khan.
Thanks for listening. See you tomorrow.
