Market Manipulation in Action: Stealth (XST) Surges 3700%

by Rachel McIntosh
  • Over the course of just a few hours, the price of Stealth rose from $0.11 to $4.50.
Market Manipulation in Action: Stealth (XST) Surges 3700%
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The cryptocurrency industry has changed quite a lot over the last two years. A space that was once completely rife with so-called ‘shitcoins’ and lacking in critical thinking has transformed into a much more skeptical marketplace with a smaller number of higher-quality projects. Or, so we’d like to think.

The truth is that market manipulation is alive and well in the cryptocurrency space. And we’re not talking about the kind of high-level market manipulation that is orchestrated by institutional players (although that’s alive and well, too)--what we’re about to describe is a tale of a good, old-fashioned pump-and-dump.

CCN reported yesterday that Stealth (XST) suddenly spiked 3700 percent. For a brief moment, Stealth’s market cap surged to over $150 million; its price went from $0.11 to over $4.00 in a matter of several hours.

Then, just as soon as the spike had come, it went away. Stealth suddenly crashed to $0.21, and then to $0.14, where it sat at the time of writing.

Market Manipulation is Alive and Well in the Crypto Space

“If you know even a little about how markets work, it’s not hard to understand what happened here,” reads the report by CCN. “Someone came in and decided to buy a great deal of XST – at its then low-price – and orders disappeared until the ladder was climbed to $4.50. XST holders and trading bots took note of this and dumped, dumped, dumped until the coin lost all its gains.”

Because Stealth coin is only listed in three pairs spread across two exchanges--Bittrex, which is fairly reputable, and Bitinka, which no one has ever heard of--it’s likely that the scheme took place on the latter platform. Most high-profile exchanges have measures in place to identify and halt pump-and-dumps before they get out of control.

While this kind of thing may have become less common in the cryptosphere, the pumping and dumping of Stealth is a reminder that the cryptocurrency industry is not free from fraudulent activity yet.

And while one relatively small incident like this may not say so much about the cryptocurrency industry at large, evidence of more wide-spread market manipulation is further out in the open than ever before. Several weeks ago, Bitwise Asset Management published a report saying that 95 percent of cryptocurrency trading volume is fake.

The cryptocurrency industry has changed quite a lot over the last two years. A space that was once completely rife with so-called ‘shitcoins’ and lacking in critical thinking has transformed into a much more skeptical marketplace with a smaller number of higher-quality projects. Or, so we’d like to think.

The truth is that market manipulation is alive and well in the cryptocurrency space. And we’re not talking about the kind of high-level market manipulation that is orchestrated by institutional players (although that’s alive and well, too)--what we’re about to describe is a tale of a good, old-fashioned pump-and-dump.

CCN reported yesterday that Stealth (XST) suddenly spiked 3700 percent. For a brief moment, Stealth’s market cap surged to over $150 million; its price went from $0.11 to over $4.00 in a matter of several hours.

Then, just as soon as the spike had come, it went away. Stealth suddenly crashed to $0.21, and then to $0.14, where it sat at the time of writing.

Market Manipulation is Alive and Well in the Crypto Space

“If you know even a little about how markets work, it’s not hard to understand what happened here,” reads the report by CCN. “Someone came in and decided to buy a great deal of XST – at its then low-price – and orders disappeared until the ladder was climbed to $4.50. XST holders and trading bots took note of this and dumped, dumped, dumped until the coin lost all its gains.”

Because Stealth coin is only listed in three pairs spread across two exchanges--Bittrex, which is fairly reputable, and Bitinka, which no one has ever heard of--it’s likely that the scheme took place on the latter platform. Most high-profile exchanges have measures in place to identify and halt pump-and-dumps before they get out of control.

While this kind of thing may have become less common in the cryptosphere, the pumping and dumping of Stealth is a reminder that the cryptocurrency industry is not free from fraudulent activity yet.

And while one relatively small incident like this may not say so much about the cryptocurrency industry at large, evidence of more wide-spread market manipulation is further out in the open than ever before. Several weeks ago, Bitwise Asset Management published a report saying that 95 percent of cryptocurrency trading volume is fake.

About the Author: Rachel McIntosh
Rachel McIntosh
  • 1509 Articles
  • 52 Followers
About the Author: Rachel McIntosh
Rachel is a self-taught crypto geek and a passionate writer. She believes in the power that the written word has to educate, connect and empower individuals to make positive and powerful financial choices. She is the Podcast Host and a Cryptocurrency Editor at Finance Magnates.
  • 1509 Articles
  • 52 Followers

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