Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Christian Billionaire Goes on Trial for Major Wall Street Fraud
Christian Billionaire Goes on Trial for Major Wall Street Fraud
Mar 16, 2026 7:08 PM

  Bill Hwang brought a book by Dietrich Bonhoeffer to court to read during jury selection.

  And during opening arguments on Monday, his Christian connections from New York packed out a courtroom to support him.

  He had given his investment firm a Christian name, held Wall Street Bible readings, and distributed millions to evangelical charities.

  But federal prosecutors at Hwangs highly anticipated criminal trial are accusing the billionaire of being a mob boss mastermind rather than a humble evangelical investor following his convictions.

  Hwang has been charged with tens of billions of dollars worth of securities fraud. In a packed courtroom in lower Manhattan on Monday, the prosecution claimed his investment firm Archegos Capital Management was an organized criminal enterprise, like a mob operation. Hwang faces decades in prison.

  The blockbuster trial is expected to last eight weeks and will include witnesses from the Christian world in New York. Andy Mills, the former president of The Kings College, who also served as CEO of Archegos and as chairman of Hwangs foundation, will testify for the defense.

  Hwang and his wife, Becky Hwang, are the sole backers of the $528 million Grace and Mercy Foundation, which supports ministries in New York and around the world.

  Many of Hwangs former employees at Archegos are Christianslike Jensen Ko, who, after the collapse of Archegos, started a new investment fund called AriseN. And Archegos was named for a Greek word used to describe Christ as the author of our salvation (Heb. 2:10) and the prince of life (Acts 3:15).

  Archegos fell apart in March 2021. It bought up massive positions in a few companies using borrowed funds from banks, with the goal of pumping up the prices of those stocks, prosecutors allege. But when the prices came down, Archegos couldnt pay its losses to the banks, and in a matter of days, it defaulted on billions. Investment bank Credit Suisse lost $5.5 billion to Archegos and wound down its operations in the fallout.

  When Archegos collapsed, it evaporated $100 billion in market value, according to prosecutors, including about $36 billion of Archegoss own funds. The question the trial will try to answer is if this was fraud or normal trading that went badly, as the defense argues.

  Hwang had it all, but it wasnt enough, said federal prosecutor Alexandra Rothman in her opening statements on Monday. Rothman said Hwang was rigging the game to keep winning on Wall Street lying to dozens of banks.

  Rothman said Archegos had a corrupt core, a small group of people who did whatever Hwang wanted, including lie and cheat. Their market manipulation left a path of destruction, she said.

  Defense attorney Barry Berke, in his opening statement, began to tell the story of Hwangs humble originsHwang is the son of a Korean pastor and immigrated from Korea to the US when he was a teenagerbut Judge Alvin Hellerstein cut him off for ranging too far away from details of stocks and trades.

  Still, Berke in his opening arguments wove in mentions of Hwangs charitable foundation as well as a Grace and Mercy Foundation project called the Just Show Up Book Club. Berke emphasized that Hwang didnt live the flashy life of a billionaire.

  In court, Hwang appeared calm and coiffed, and milled in the back of the courtroom during breaks shaking hands and embracing friends. Hes currently free on a $100 million bond.

  Outside the courtroom, in the same building, the corruption trial of Sen. Bob Menendez was beginning. Across the street, the trial of former president Donald Trump was continuing. TV cameras blanketed the sidewalks, adding to the sense of frenzy around the trial.

  Hwang has often spoken about how his faith informs his investing, saying that setting a fair price for stocks is work that honors God. That was a central pillar of his defense attorneys opening argument, that Hwang bought and held these massive positions because he sincerely valued the companies he was investing in.

  He had the courage of his convictions, said Berke to the jury. He believed in these companies.

  Continuing the idea of Hwangs fair price argument, Berke said that Hwang believed the select companies that Archegos put billions into were victims of negative misinformation from short sellers, who would profit off of declines in stock prices.

  He believed prices were pushed artificially down, he said.

  Another detail from Hwangs past got little mention on the first day of the trial: a 2012 civil settlement of $44 million over insider trading charges. Hwang didnt admit fault in that settlement, but his hedge fund, Tiger Asia, pleaded guilty to a criminal fraud charge. In 2013 he converted Tiger Asia to Archegos and made it a family office to manage his wealth.

  Archegos shared offices with Grace and Mercy in Manhattan, and some employees worked with both entities doing investments. In a 2020 email the prosecutors shared in the trial, Hwang discussed his investment strategy during the pandemic, addressing both Grace and Mercy and Archegos employees.

  After Archegos folded, some Archegos employees took on Grace and Mercy titles. Some former Archegos employees will testify, as well as top staff from Grace and Mercy, like chief operating officer Diana Pae.

  Two top Archegos employees, William Tomita and Scott Becker, have pleaded guilty and will testify for the prosecution.

  Jurors spent the first day of the trial on Monday hearing explanations of terms like swaps, liquidity, and margins. Ninety-year-old judge Hellerstein, who has overseen other federal financial crimes cases, jumped in with clarifying questions when testimony seemed confusing for the average person and poured himself cups of coffee from the carafe on his bench.

  In previous pre-trial hearings, Hellerstein has wondered aloud why Hwang did what he did: What did he want to achieve? He lost his money.

  After opening arguments, the prosecution called its first witness, Bryan Fairbanks, the longtime head of prime brokerage risk for investment bank UBS. Fairbanks testified that UBS lost $860 million through Archegoss defaults on borrowed funds, not knowing Archegos had similar investments with other banks.

  All the information they shared with us was made up, Fairbanks said. If he had known what Archegoss true market position was, he said he would have hit the panic button.

  The trial will continue Mondays to Thursdays during the coming weeks.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
Once One People of One Book
Mark A. Noll, professor emeritus of history at the University of Notre Dame, is among the most prolific and plished historians of American religion ever. I once imagined that the 2002 book America’s God: From Jonathan Edwards to Abraham Lincoln was Noll’s magnum opus. With the recent appearance of America’s Book: The Rise and Decline of a Bible Civilization, 1794–1911, I am no longer sure whether to view America’s God as a standalone volume or as a sort panion...
The Neo-Latinate Imagination of Joseph Bottum
Joseph Bottum has long been known for his elegant prose style, omnivorous literary allusiveness, and cultural critic’s eye for what we know, what we think we know, and the sometimes embarrassing gap between those things. His decades of editorial work for The Weekly Standard and First Things guided both those organs through their great ages of growth from political and religious magazines to eclectic and spirited journals of cultural review. Less known is that Bottum’s first book was a...
Christian Pluralism as a Way of Loving
The evangelical Anglican theologian Michael F. Bird provides a clear-eyed and charitable vision of the current state of religious liberty in the Western world. Working from Australia, but with a keen eye on developments elsewhere and particularly in America, Bird’s offering provides both a framework for evaluating the contemporary situation as well as a call for Christians to promote the need for religious liberty more responsibly. Bird’s book is a helpful point of departure for engaging the challenges and...
The Black Church: A World Within a World
What we mean when we use the word “Black” (and whether or not we capitalize it) causes constant confusion in American life. We are liable to contrast Black with white, and to treat the two terms as though they belong to the same category: race. But this is a mistake. As a matter of historical fact, Black Americans formed separate cultural institutions because they were excluded from white institutions or forced to be subordinate within them on account of...
Reading Scripture with the Church Fathers
Gerald Bray enjoys a rich résumé: research professor of divinity at Beeson Divinity School, Birmingham, Alabama, where he taught from 1993 to 2006; ordained minister of the Church of England; director of research for the Latimer Trust. He has published on the patristic period and wider matters of church history, systematic theology, and Anglicanism. In How the Church Fathers Read the Bible, Bray does the church further service by providing an imaginative and insightful overview of the approach of...
National Conservatism One Year Later
On the afternoon of November 3, 2021, I sat alone at a table in the Orlando Airport TGI Fridays, exhausted. Equally travel-weary families­ (or at least parents), whose children still bustled with energy, surrounded me. I was grateful for getting through TSA security with plenty of time for a meal before my flight, and grateful to be—for the first time in three days—alone with my thoughts. When my salad arrived, I pushed aside my notes from NatCon 2, the...
The Flawed Greatness of Thomas Jefferson
It is always hard to know where to begin with Thomas Jefferson—or where to end. In that respect, he is not that different from a great many other talented political figures in our history. The politician’s art all but requires a talent for enigma, an ability to draw in disparate followers and factions while remaining mysterious, un-pin-down-able, containing worlds of seeming contradiction within both public image and private life. Think of the tangled plexity of men like Woodrow Wilson,...
Antigone: A Hero for Our Time
Sophocles’ Antigone is a Rorschach test. People see in it whatever they are thinking. To the self-professed and much munist philosopher Slavoj Žižek, Antigone is a “bitch,” though she may also be an admirable figure in her zealous and determined striving against her government. Or perhaps, Žižek suggests alternately, she is a troublemaker creating havoc within an otherwise healthy, well-organized state. In recent versions of the play that he has published with differing endings, Žižek has put forward both...
Heroes and Monsters: British Abolition and the Art of Compromise
It may be the most decisive plete victory in any moral argument in human history. European and North American elites had, for centuries, deliberately ignored the ethics of the Atlantic slave trade, or justified it as a regrettable necessity, or simply accepted it as a vast fact of life that could not be wished away. Suddenly, in the 1780s, a previously eccentric and extreme view—that the trade ought to be abolished—won a mass following in both Britain and the...
Gertrude Himmelfarb: Historian of the Liberal Paradox
Intellectual historians can serve their societies as guides in wayward times. If they are willing to look at the past not as a primitive patchwork of error and sin, but as an arena of human action free of the present’s particular prejudices, they can learn to see in their own time and place what is invisible to their contemporaries. NEH chairman Jon Parrish Peede perhaps said it best: “The life and work of Gertrude Himmelfarb enriched … the humanities...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved