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Historically, populist ideologies have been hostile toward finance and financial institutions, depicting finance as a tool that elites use to oppress the masses. In 2021, however, members of the U.S. far right started a movement they called the Parallel Economy, founding banks, retailers, and digital payment platforms that duplicated mainstream economic institutions but kept money among fellow right-wing populists. Participants in the Parallel Economy sought to avoid giving money to mainstream banks and corporations that could de-bank or de-list them for violating key terms and conditions, including hate-speech policies or restrictions on what services could be rendered. How did right-wing populism become a salient feature in finance? To answer this question, this study introduces the concept of right-populist finance: financial services that, according to their providers, advance the political goals of right-wing populism. Through a case study of PublicSquare—a conservative Christian e-commerce platform central to the Parallel Economy movement, which rebranded itself as a financial technology company in 2025—the authors reveal a set of rhetorical strategies that members of the far right used to treat finance as embedded within, rather than hostile to, right-wing populist political projects. The authors also conduct a social network analysis of the Parallel Economy’s most important participants to show that, in practice, the Parallel Economy had a variety of connections to mainstream financial elites, revealing limits to how effective right-populist finance can be as a durable, structural shift in the financial and political landscape.