Posts on Chinaâs premier social network Weibo have suggested that some of the countryâs largest bitcoin exchanges are manipulating trading volumes to gain more customers and rise through the ranks of the worldâs most popular exchanges.
The sentiments have been reflected overseas as well, on forums like Reddit, Bitcointalk.org and Twitter.
Chinese trading activity could be having an effect on the worldwide bitcoin price once again, with prices dropping from a high of $859 to a low of $810 in trading over the past weekend.
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This drop is pure evidence of market manipulation coming from china or traders at huobi live under a rock. Btc has been having great newsâ¦
â Mega Coin Trader (@MegaCoinTrader) January 24, 2014
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Graphs and charts appear to back up the claims with some odd figures, with some showing bid prices for bitcoin actually higher than ask prices, or even dead level. The latter would be a coincidence on a genuine open market, the former almost impossible.
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Trades on Chinaâs now-largest bitcoin exchange, Huobi, show prices with four decimal places, higher than the maximum offered to customers on the web interface. There are also several trades with exactly the same price.
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Shenanigans, right? But as a wise man once said: Iâm sure youâll find itâs more complicated than that.
At least one trusted Chinese bitcoin trading source told CoinDesk the charts pointed to manipulation from within, the result of either in-house trading bots or software that mirrors or mimics trades on rival exchanges to project an appearance of high volume.
Until the Peopleâs Bank of China threw the local bitcoin business community into chaos in December last year with new regulations, it seemed pretty straightforward. BTC China was number one, with trade volumes and price records beating even Mt. Gox for much of 2013.
Things have changed since. Denied access to bank transfers and third-party payment processors, BTC Chinaâs volumes dropped as all exchanges scrambled for ways to stay in business under the new scenario. Some continued to transfer money via corporate and personal accounts, and BTC China introduced a voucher system.
OKCoin and BTC China reintroduced trading fees, which had been absent from most Chinese exchanges in 2013 and possibly created higher volatility worldwide. Fee-free Huobi rose to top position and BTC China fell to third, even fourth.
But were the position shifts due to real market forces? Bobby Lee, CEO of BTC China, said:
âWeâve known for a while that other Chinese bitcoin exchanges have been faking data. Weâve seen our trading volumes drop off heavily while others have, supposedly, witnessed massive surges.â
He explained there are two ways in which exchanges can fake data. âOne is to just quote a higher number â to just artificially pad it by 20,000 BTC a day, the other is to actually fabricate trades.â
Lee said OKCoin got caught âred handedâ fabricating trades a few weeks ago and has since lost a lot of consumer faith and trust. He went on to say that Huobi has now been caught doing the same and the evidence has been posted on Weibo.
CoinDesk also spoke to Leon Li (Also known in China as Li Lin), founder and CEO of Huobi. He denied emphatically that any manipulation was occurring and said Huobiâs success was due to its fee structure. He said:
âHuobi does not need to exaggerate the volume of transactions, because we already have much more trading volume than domestic counterparts. There is no need to take the risk to cheat, it is not logical.â
âAlso, I remind you, our trading volume have a great relationship with zero transaction fees, so it is not reasonable to compare us with the platform abroad which charge transaction fees.â
China-based bitcoin exchanges have been accused by users of manipulating trading volumes before, with some claiming to shift over 30,000 BTC in December amidst bitcoinâs price plunge, and users claimed the actual number might be a tenth of that.
Some have suggested the high volumes are due to high-frequency trading (HFT) bots, and one said the exchange is able to split large orders into small ones. Other commenters have expressed either surprise or criticism at the exchangesâ lack of transparency in general.
Xu Mingxing, CEO of OKCoin, has publicly stated a dislike for HFT software and the effects it has on exchange volumes, despite apparently allowing large trades through OKCoinâs API.
All kinds of exchanges can fake volumes merely to gain attention, in the hope traders will see them as the most popular platform and move their activities there.
Itâs not just a matter of misreporting the facts. Sometimes, âfakeâ is also ârealâ.
Companies can unleash bots on their own trading floors to profit through arbitrage, a move which appears to boost volumes, while making a profit for the company without paying any fees. Whether this constitutes fakery, or fraud, is a grey area as the trades are actually executed and ârealâ traders may trade against them.
This kind of activity, along with âmirroringâ (or simply copying) trades made on other exchanges with real trades of your own, may not technically be wrong but it remains risky to try.
Itâs difficult to tell for sure if exchange trading volumes are being manipulated. Chart and price anomalies are possibly a sign.
The primary way is to look at market depth charts, if such data is made public (and can itself be trusted).
This is determined by monitoring the number and activity of traders who count as âmarket makersâ within the market, posting buy/sell orders at specific rates and thus setting the price. If trading activity is not genuine, market depth is shallow and such orders will not be fulfilled, even when actual prices venture into the territory of the offers.
China Image via Shutterstock