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Topic: [2018-03-21]Volumes on Most Major Cryptocurrency Exchanges Are Fake or Inflated: (Read 91 times)

legendary
Activity: 2170
Merit: 1427
One way or another, all these shitcoin exchanges pushing these insane volumes are messed, and that's even a mild way to put it. I am fairly sure that once proper regulations for exchanges start to kick in, these practices will no longer be tolerated, and may even become a harshly punisable offence. Investigation will likely also expose how these exchange make use of phantom orders to artifially fill up their orderbooks, and thus manipulate their markets. Cryptsy used to do it a lot, and that in a very obvious manner. It almost looked like they didn't care about the public knowing about it. Bittrex has been accused of doing it, Poloniex, etc. Poloniex has been taken over by Circle with the approval of the SEC, so I assume they did their research properly before approving that takeover.

If anyone wants to have a laugh.

BitMex's last 24H zero fee BTC volume = $3.153.930.000
legendary
Activity: 3500
Merit: 2246
🌀 Cosmic Casino
This is an interesting investigation. It looks like the OKEx doesn't care though and continue to inflate their volumes. Looking at today's numbers on Coinmarketcap one might think that OKEx is not only one of biggest exchanges, but the biggest one:

Bitfinex's trading volume in 24 hrs = $961,082,287

GDAX's trading volume in 24 hrs = $402,312,891

Kraken's trading volume in 24 hrs = $386,582,868

OKEx's trading volume in 24 hrs = $1,144,469,243

On a side note, it looks like indeed the selling of Mt. Gox Bitcoins impacted the market, although I personally thought it shouldn't.
hero member
Activity: 756
Merit: 505
I don't think it's still a concrete evidence that it is happening. The only way to really check it is to actually see the records of the exchanges. Thing is, in cryptocurrency trading there are a lot of bots that trade on the market. So any sudden change in the prices or orderbooks will have an unpredictable effect on the coin since there might be trading bots that have the same strategy and holding a lot of coins to change the outcome of the anticipated result the guy was hoping for.
newbie
Activity: 29
Merit: 1
Earlier this month, cryptocurrency trader Sylvain Ribes investigated into the volumes of most small-scale cryptocurrencies and discovered that the trading volume of OKEx, the fourth largest cryptocurrency trading platform in the world, is mostly inflated.

Inflated volumes
Ribes, who initially set out to conduct a study on the liquidity of cryptocurrencies and digital assets, utilized a method he named “slippage” to test the order book of each cryptocurrency trading pair. The slippage method by tests the liquidity of digital assets by selling $50,000 worth of each asset across various exchanges.

After selling $50,000 worth of a cryptocurrency, Ribes measured the rate of decline of that particular cryptocurrency on a certain exchange to measure its liquidity. Ribes implemented this method to test the liquidity of cryptocurrencies on OKEx, Bitfinex, Kraken, and GDAX.

Operated by OKCoin, formerly the largest cryptocurrency exchange in China prior to the local government’s crackdown on trading, Hong Kong-based OKEx briefly became the biggest cryptocurrency exchange internationally, as reported by Cointelegraph, overtaking Binance in March 2018. At the time of reporting, OKEx remains among the four largest trading platforms, alongside Binance, Huobi, and Bitfinex.

Bitfinex, Kraken, and GDAX are regulated cryptocurrency exchanges that allow cryptocurrency-to-fiat trading. GDAX was founded and is currently being operated by Coinbase, which has more than 20 mln users and is the most widely utilized Bitcoin wallet. Kraken is based in San Francisco, while Bitfinex is based in Hong Kong, alongside OKEx and Huobi.

According to the chart below, Kraken and GDAX, which are mostly utilized by users to process cryptocurrency-to-fiat trades, deposits, and withdrawals, recorded the smallest slippages, signaling that the two exchanges have sufficient liquidity to deal with relatively large sell-offs, in the range of $50,000 to $100,000.

Pic

Image source: Blog post of Sylvian Ribes on Medium

However, the rate of slippage on OKEx, supposedly one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges in the world, was substantially higher than that of the three fiat-processing cryptocurrency exchanges.

Large slippage, manipulation possible
On GDAX, a sell off of $50,000 worth of a particular cryptocurrency only led to a slippage of around 0.1 percent, as seen on the blue dots on the chart above. However, $50,000 sell offs on OKEx led to massive slippages, as the value of cryptocurrencies fell and order books became unstable.

On a blog post detailing his findings, Ribes stated that the research has shown how the volumes of OKEx and other cryptocurrency-only exchanges are fabricated and inflated, given that a small amount of sell orders can manipulate the order books and prices of cryptocurrencies.

“The chart is striking. It shows how, although all first three exchanges seem to behave rather similarly, OKex pairs, in red, all have a massively higher slippage with regards to their volume. Like I explained before, this can only mean that most of the volume OKex claims is completely fabricated.”

Moreover, Ribes revealed that the chart above excluded slippages of over 4 percent. The chart provided by Ribes below, which includes slippages of more than 4 percent, show the shallow order books and low liquidity of OKEx.

Pic

Image source: Blog post of Sylvian Ribes on Medium

Mt. Gox and other factors influencing BTC price
On March 7, 2018, cryptocurrency analysts including Alistair Milne stated that the sell off of hundreds of millions of dollars in Bitcoin has led the price of the cryptocurrency to crash down to $8,300. Cointelegraph released an in-depth analysis on the matter, dissecting the impact Mt. Gox bitcoin sell-off had on the market over the past few weeks, and its continuous effect on the entire cryptocurrency market.

Despite the massive amount of Bitcoin he holds, Mt. Gox trustee Nobuaki Kobayashi dumped tens of thousands of dollars in Bitcoin in the public market, on cryptocurrency exchanges rather than over-the-counter (OTC) markets. The abrupt sell-off of nearly 32,000 Bitcoin led to a domino effect across all major cryptocurrency exchanges, and the price of Bitcoin fell as it caused panic within the public market.

Evidently, the Bitcoin market was not solely impacted by the sell off of Mt. Gox Bitcoins. It was a combination of many factors including the US government hearing on initial coin offerings (ICOs), negative mainstream media coverage about traditional finance experts criticizing the cryptocurrency market, and fear, uncertainty and doubt from Japan. The mixture of these factors alongside lack of momentum led the price of Bitcoin to decline.

Easy to distort volumes and price
In illiquid markets and trading platforms with inflated volumes, it is relatively easy to manipulate the price of small cryptocurrencies. While it takes many major factors and an unlikely correlation of events to bring down the price of major cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum, Ribes’ research demonstrates that a similar result can be achieved in a market with small cryptocurrencies with capital in the range of $50,000 to $100,000.

Ribes further emphasized that illiquid pairs did not just include small cryptocurrencies, but trading pairs of major cryptocurrencies like NEO and IOTA which boast market caps of over $3 bln can slip by more than 10 percent merely with a sale of $50,000.

“Many pairs, albeit boasting up to $5 mln volumes, would cost you more than 10 percent in slippage, should you want to liquidate a mere $50,000 in assets. Those pairs included, at the time of the data parsing (March 6, 2018): NEO/BTC, IOTA/USD, QTUM/USD. Hardly illiquid or low-profile assets,” Ribes added.

Changpeng Zhao, the CEO at Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, stated that the research of Ribes is a “good in-depth analysis” of the cryptocurrency market.


https://cointelegraph.com/news/volumes-on-most-major-cryptocurrency-exchanges-are-fake-or-inflated-study
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