Advertisement
Advertisement
Digital currencies
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Representations of the ripple, bitcoin, ethereum and litecoin virtual currencies on a personal computer motherboard. The recent explosion of nearly 2,000 cryptocurrencies in a largely unregulated environment has greatly expanded the scope for abuse in the trading of these digital assets, according to a new study. Photo: Reuters

Cryptocurrency market rife with ‘pump-and-dump’ schemes, study shows

  • The scale of the fraud is ‘widespread and often quite profitable’, and should alarm regulators, according to a new academic paper

Scammers have been successfully manipulating the price of digital assets, including bitcoin, so they can dump their holdings onto unsuspecting traders at a higher price, according to a new academic paper mapping out the extent of market abuse in cryptocurrencies.

Researchers identified 4,818 so-called pump-and-dump attempts between January and July, using data scraped from Telegram and Discord, two encrypted messaging apps popular with the cryptocurrency community.

The scale of the fraud is “widespread and often quite profitable”, and should alarm regulators, according to the draft published in the SSRN, a repository of academic research.

“The proliferation of cryptocurrencies and changes in technology have made it easier to conduct pump-and-dump schemes,” academics from the University of Tulsa, University of New Mexico and Tel Aviv University wrote. “While the fundamentals of the ruse have not changed in the last century, the recent explosion of nearly 2,000 cryptocurrencies in a largely unregulated environment has greatly expanded the scope for abuse.”

Many of the groups attempting to manipulate cryptocurrency markets do not hide their goals, the paper said, attributing this to a regulatory vacuum.

The study gives further ammunition to calls for tighter regulation of cryptocurrencies.

The US Securities and Exchange Commission recently cited concerns about manipulation as a worry that must be addressed before it approves a bitcoin exchange-traded fund, which proponents believe will usher in widespread adoption of digital currencies.

In May, the US Justice Department opened a criminal inquiry into whether traders are manipulating the price of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, dramatically ratcheting up scrutiny of the space.

Pumping obscure coins with low volume is “much more profitable than pumping the dominant coins in the ecosystem”, the researchers found.

Bitcoin, the most well-known cryptocurrency, was also targeted in 82 separate manipulation efforts. “Bitcoin is not immune from the pump-and-dump phenomenon,” the authors said.

After a speculative bubble in digital assets burst last December, markets have pummelled bitcoin, which has lost more than 70 per cent of its value this year.

Post