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Bitcoin Businesses The Almighty Buck Technology

Most Bitcoin Trading Faked by Unregulated Exchanges, Study Finds (wsj.com) 102

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.

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Most Bitcoin Trading Faked by Unregulated Exchanges, Study Finds

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    We need a regulated One World Exchange where we can trade cryptocurrencies and tokenized stocks.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      So much for that whole "decentralized" thing. You know, what we were told was the entire point of crypto.

      • I think this is the joke they were trying to make.

        But anymore, who knows, maybe they want government guarantees on digital currency.

  • 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 pe
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • I know because I mined it at $11 when it cost that much in power using a midrange OpenCL 1.0 GPU right as the 1.1 generation was coming out. The rise from $1 to $11 dollars was carried mostly on hype news by tech websites and then steadily from there up to ~600 or so before the MtGox scam was exposed when all those bitcoins disappeared. During that time is when ASIC mining started becoming a thing, backed by ~3 ASIC design/bitcoin mining companies who after the initial run of units was given out to custome

    • It required a constant infusion of cash to pay those who got in early and had the sense to cash out when they had a chance.
    • Bitcoin doesn't experience inflation. It's actually the opposite. There is a finite amount of Bitcoin.
      • While it is not being flat out printed in mass quantities, the inflation I'm speaking of is the decrease in it's purchasing power. While the overall quantity may be a static number, it's transactions slowly were done in smaller and smaller fractions of coins. It is digital so it has basically infinite coins already, depending on how small you chop it up, with quantity of coin determined relative to the value of coin.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Are we learning yet?

  • ... is it real or is it fake?
    This is not the first /. article where the title and its contents contradict each other.

    *IN THE YEAR*.

    Seriously, Slashdot ?

    • What he means is, there is a real market for fake exchanges.

    • They are saying 95% of trading is fake but they want to create a fund that ignores that 95% of fake trading and just focuses on real trading. It won't work though because the regardless that 5% will be impacted by the 95% of fake trading.
    • by h4x0t ( 1245872 )
      Article is clear. 95% is fake, they want to continue studying the 5% that is verifiable.
  • 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.

    • Exchanges are the dirty little secret that makes Bitcoin's (and every cryptocurrency's) model "work".

      Bitcoin, yes. Most, perhaps even all, other extant cryptocurrencies as well. But I'd be careful not to exclude the possibility that it's possible to design a cryptocurrency that actually does scale, and could therefore achieve liquidity without exchanges.

      • It is not impossible, but I am skeptical.

        Liquidity is a complex concept, which includes both the ability to convert into and out of an "asset class" at all, but also certain degree of short term price stability. Short term price stability does not easily come from a distributed model. Large exchanges have the resources and skills to help maintain price stability (even imperfectly), and pocket a bit of profit along the way.

  • >Up to 95% of all reported trading in bitcoin is artificially created by unregulated exchanges,

    Is this any different than the automated 'trading' that happens on the regulated exchanges. The kind of trading where 10,000 bids/ are made for a stock in one second and then immediately withdrawn in order to manipulate its price?

    • No, because the HFT trading you are referring to is not done clandestinely by the exchanges themselves (to create the impression of volume, necessary in order to entice bigger and bigger fish into your exchange, and the sideline balances that come with them - upon which you make float and charge fees for in/egress), but by outside specialist trading companies who pay top dollar for real estate with advantageous geographic position as near as possible to the exchange's trading floor. This necessitates their

An Ada exception is when a routine gets in trouble and says 'Beam me up, Scotty'.

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