More Than Half of All Bitcoin Trades Are Fake(news.slashdot.org) |
More Than Half of All Bitcoin Trades Are Fake(news.slashdot.org) |
https://www.forbes.com/sites/javierpaz/2022/08/26/more-than-...
I wonder what basis they use to determine "likely to be fake or non-economic". Seems highly unlikely they have any concrete evidence.
Makes me want to start a "think tank" where I can just publish whatever speculation I'm feeling at the moment with fabricated numbers built from specious methods to add a veneer of substantiation.
(Also, kind of amusing that an article about how bitcoin exchanges are fabricating numbers is fabricating numbers itself.)
I suspect what they're classifying as Wash Trading are actually tumbler services that essentially launder the source and destinations of transactions. Strictly speaking, those are arguably economic because the tumbler takes a (sometimes substantial) cut but it would fall out of the line of thinking of "buying goods or services" that people think more traditionally.
That said, the methodology is right there at the end of the article[1]. It does seem rather open to thumbs on scales.
[1]: https://www.forbes.com/sites/javierpaz/2022/08/26/more-than-...
The activities of the market makers are well disclosed in a comprehensive IPO disclosure document. Importantly, any relationship between the underwriters and the company they are underwriting is well disclosed.
Meanwhile, folks tout the transparency of the public ledger, but actually the transparency is very shallow and disclosure is very poor, particularly around conflicts of interest.
Additionally, if the company lies to make the "pump" you can put the shares back to the company (per the securities act).
You just have to look at what happened to WeWork to see the IPO disclosure process successfully killing a bad company.
Beyond that point (is it necessary?) an IPO in the US is heavily regulated, disclosure by the SEC, underwriter activities by FINRA and the listing itself by the stock exchange.
I don't think you can call IPO market support "pump and dump".
If you buy a share from your self or from a party where you have an agreement to trade back at a fix price, no risk is taken. That's called a "wash trade" and is illegal for securities.