Manipulating exchanges, or crypto Catch 22

Written by OG_design | Published 2018/07/23
Tech Story Tags: bitcoin | catch-22 | crypto-price-manipulation | price-manipulation | cryptocurrency

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By Olga Grinina

Kraken may be furiously denying allegations on their involvement with the USDT price manipulation, yet that Bloomberg journalist who stirred the waters probably has some finance background to make a trustworthy conclusion and actually comprehend such fundamental trading concepts as ‘arbitrage’, ‘order book’, and ‘currency peg’. So, what were those ‘weird signals’ spotted by his curious eye? Taking a look at a snapshot of the USDT order book at Kraken, we see that there is well over $1 million dollars of resting buy and sell orders within a suspiciously very close range around a price level of $1 US dollar. As a result, USDT price alterations are very small. What argument Kraken holds for the Bloomberg ‘haters’? Well, it’s basically calling them dummies not able to grasp crypto trading basics and USDT inherent design.

USDT Order Book where suspicious amount of 13, 076.389 was first spotted

Have you ever wondered how tokens are getting listed at crypto exchanges in the first place? All the exchanges, whether it be the tycoons like Binance or smaller players, need stable liquidity providers and more users. Hence, there is likely a lot going on under the counter — especially when we’re talking emerging exchanges ready to ‘negotiate’ whatever terms to get that boost in user base.

More so, crypto exchanges are not the ones caught in manipulation. Wash trading has long been known at traditional stock market. In crypto realm the phenomenon scaled up tremendously. Investors holding a significant amount of crypto — either startup founders or simply persons of interest — would simultaneously sell and buy the same amount of tokens to create a misleading activity suggesting artificial demand. The modus operandi is pretty easy: a player or a bot places a sell order, only to then place a buy order to simply buy out from himself, or vice versa. And voila, there you have it: the trading volume is surging giving the impression that the token is more in demand than it actually is. It’s hard to access what percentage of newly launched tokens have gone through this grey scheme, no one gives you that statistics!

It’s a logical leap to suggest that faking trade volumes and token price manipulations are not going anywhere any time soon, at least until crypto wash trading is announced illegal by the regulators who finally force the bitcoin Wild Wild West players to comply. Until then, the exchanges will be talking to token launchers negotiating mutually beneficial deals. It’s official: the crypto market remains highly manipulative space. Shady startups and ICOs, exchanges, media outlets, and whatnot might all plead guilty in some respect. The implications of this are rather alarming for both blockchain and traditional financial industries. Not only the reputation is at stake. By launching a token for the sake of pushing it to the exchange and pumping up the price, those ‘artful entrepreneurs’ are merely demolishing our good faith in new technologies.


Published by HackerNoon on 2018/07/23