
Iran Declares Major Private Bank Bankrupt Amid Sanctions and Mismanagement
Tehran has announced the bankruptcy of Ayandeh Bank, one of Iran’s largest private institutions, transferring its assets to state-owned Melli Bank and promising depositors access to savings. The move, reported October 26, 2025, highlights widening financial strain in the Islamic Republic as sanctions bite and years of risky lending and ill-fated projects come due.
Officials presented the transfer as a necessary stabilization measure for an economy under pressure, with the Central Bank vowing continuity for customers. The collapse, however, signals deeper troubles inside Iran’s banking sector—where government controls, politicized credit, and opaque balance sheets often mask systemic fragilities.
For Israel and regional partners, Iran’s economic turbulence is more than a financial story; it speaks to the regime’s capacity to fund proxies and pursue nuclear ambitions. Economic distress does not automatically curtail aggression, but it can reshape calculations and create openings for diplomacy and deterrence to have a greater effect.
(INN/VFI News)
“Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God.” – Isaiah 41:10