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Most Bitcoin Trading Faked by Unregulated Exchanges, Study Finds (wsj.com)

Up to 95% of all reported trading in bitcoin is artificially created by unregulated exchanges, according to a new study [PDF], raising fresh doubts about the nascent market following a steep decline in prices over the past year. From a report: Fraudulent trading volume has dogged cryptocurrency trading for years, but the extent of the market manipulation has been difficult to determine. Bitwise Asset Management said its analysis of trading activity at 81 exchanges over four days in March indicates that the actual market for bitcoin is far smaller than previously thought. The San Francisco-based company submitted its research to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission with an application to launch a bitcoin-based exchange-traded fund.

The study, made public Thursday, is an attempt to alleviate the agency's longstanding concerns that a bitcoin ETF would leave investors exposed to fraud and market manipulation. Bitwise's fund, if approved, would be based upon the 5% of trading it considers legitimate, said Matthew Hougan, Bitwise's head of global research. That volume comes from 10 regulated exchanges that can verify that their trading data and customers are real. This slice of the market, he said, is well regulated, transparent and efficient. "I hope everyone sees there is a real market for bitcoin," he said.

4 of 102 comments (clear)

  1. Bitcoin is more like an investment for people by SmaryJerry · · Score: 1, Insightful

    There was hope that it would become a true currency that started getting accepted everywhere when countries allowed it or said they wouldn't ban it. It turned into a speculative investment instead. It was already accepted at very few websites and services but with the massive decrease in value even less websites and services are accepting it as a payment. Who would invest or accept payments in a currency with massive inflation? Basically no one that has alternatives. The downward spiral cycle is now self perpetuating. Even if a company does accept a bitcoin payment they want to convert it out of bitcoin as soon as possible so they don't take a loss, this just lowers bit coins value even further and the cycle continues. There has to be some massive event to stop the spiral and change public perception. Fake trade volumes can only hold off a collapse so long.

  2. Exchanges have always been Bitcoin's #1 weakness by Rob+Cebollero · · Score: 4, Insightful

    and it's #1 strength. Exchanges are the dirty little secret that makes Bitcoin's (and every cryptocurrency's) model "work". They are unofficial, unacknowledged, yet fundamental layer of the blockchain protocol (yes, 'blockchain', not just 'cryptocurrency'), the layer that facilitates liquidity.

    And therein lies the weakness.

    The entire 'decentralization' claim of Bitcoin is utterly vitiated by the fact that the only form of market leverage that actually matters for a supposed store of value - *liquidity* - is highly centralized (even worse, tends toward further centralization with time, rather than away from it), completely opaque due to being gated and obfuscated by a handful of major exchanges, who can only perform real-time price matching by facilitating off-blockchain transactions on their internal ledgers. Opaque, that is, except to those who happen to operate one of these shops and can see all the activity on their internal reports before anyone else does.

    The handful of so-called 'decentralized exchanges' are useless science fair toys, as the Tx fees required to operate them, not to mention the enormous aggregate lag in updating their order books makes them complete non-starters as solutions to this problem.

    --
    Decentralization: the brief interval between the decline of one centralized regime and rise of another.
  3. Re: What other kind of trading could there be? by noodler · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If what you say is true then no math exists in this universe.
    Imaginary numbers are just an extension of previous non-existent numbers. I mean, you can't have -3 cows, right? So by your reasoning negative numbers don't exist. And you can't have fractional cows either (well, not life ones anyway), so rational numbers have to go as well.
    Even more worrying is to consider what 1 cow is. Where does the cow end, exactly? Do you consider the smell of a cow to be part of the cow or not? What if that smell mixes with the smell of other cows? How do you singularly define a cow in the real world?

    Imaginary numbers allow us to solve problems in this universe so one could say that the universe has no problems with producing problems that are better solved with imaginary numbers. In fact, many things we observe in nature are not solvable without imaginary numbers. Why would a number system that works fantastically well for solving real-world physical phenomena be less real than a number system we use for counting cows? It sounds like a prejudice for counting cows (which seems reasonable from an evolutionary standpoint, but is quite limiting once you start digging into the sort of stuff that really happens in the universe).

    The fact is, you can't explain over a century of physics without using imaginary numbers. Basically anything involving waves is better expressed with imaginary numbers.
    Imaginary numbers are not less real than any other numbers we have 'constructed'.

  4. Re:Bitcoin was always a Ponzi scheme by tomhath · · Score: 3, Insightful

    EVERYTHING in the market requires people who want to buy a share later to pay a premium in price to the people who bought shares early

    Completely wrong. Investing means buying shares of a company that is expected to become more valuable by earning a profit through business operations. Apple and Microsoft earn billions per year - that income does not come from people speculating on the share price, it comes from selling their products. The price of a share goes up or down depending on what investors expect the company's income will be in the future; a higher price for a more valuable company is not a "premium".

    Of course, some people can be talked into buying based on emotion rather than a reasonable expectation of future earnings (e.g.Tesla). That's speculation, not investment, and also borders on Ponzi schemes.