George Soros transferred $18 Billion to his Open Society Foundation. For the average folk this might pass as something unnoticable and even well mannered. For those who own corporations this is the gateway car for hedging against a market crash. With all the regulations currently in place, charities have become the new financial haven.
Charities are ways the rich give back to the ones in need while maintaining a healthy growth of capital. The mass kool aid if you like. For those who own corporations, charities are the only way to maintain wealth while being protected against giving away too much in taxes. The charity itself can even work as a corporation if it is managed effectively. This is the oldest game in the book and the one the Vatican and many other religious organisations posing as charities know very well. This is a game the average Joe has no idea how to play.
Soros is not alone. Over the past few years many billionaires including Bill Gates and Warren Buffet have vowed to give out most of their wealth to charities. The big guns know how to give back to society and do it in a smart way. When the market is booming, good ol' business tactics does the trick. When the market seems dangerous they would rather pull it back to charities and give away handovers instead of witnessing their money vanish in thin air. It's a win-win-win situation.
There are quite few other red flags that should also raise an eyebrow like the way the chinese are diving over the last year in and out of Bitcoin or how major hedge funds are basically doing money laundering with ICO's. Warren Buffet also sold a massive portion of IBM shares. These are ways to get money clean, into clean investments while making a healthy profit in the process.