or alternatively, there aren’t snipers and it’s just the founders rug pulling. they like to blame snipers since nobody can id the wallets
Could be, sure. ...Where I was coming from is, I was just wondering why sniping per se is dodgy, as the interviewer implies. Didn't quite get that, given how similar that is to quant trading, which is legal and above-board. ...Turns out, it isn't sniping per se that is dodgy --- unless I misread that --- but using the techniques of sniping in order to inflate prices (rather than simply make money off of legitimate arbitrage opportunities).
buying a huge quantity of coins at launch and selling milliseconds later wiping out liquidity using bots unavailable to the general public seems dodgy to me. is that possible in legitimate arbitrage opportunities?
and these guys sniped their own coin to beat the snipers to it, and used some of those funds to pay back influencers who got burned on the launch and kept the rest. and oh man, they got the president of argentina to present it as a government endorsed crypto program and rugged them. and he clearly didn’t think the post scam part of this out
also they talked a little utility and intrinsic value. pretty neat
pump and dump is basically when an entity buys up an existing crypto to create the appearance that it’s value is rising organically, then when sufficient retail buyers have put money in, they decide to pull their holdings and leave the retail buyers holding
the now worthless coin, aka the bag. this is often done with “utility” coin.
a rug pull is basically the same thing, but with a brand new crypto coin. this is basically all meme coins.
these are both often accompanied by paying influencers to advertise the crypto to their fans, often without disclosing it’s a paid ad. a pump and dump example would be doge coin when elon musk pumped it, and there are several rug pulls in this thread recently
pump and dump is basically when an entity buys up an existing crypto to create the appearance that it’s value is rising organically, then when sufficient retail buyers have put money in, they decide to pull their holdings and leave the retail buyers holding the now worthless coin, aka the bag. this is often done with “utility” coin.
a rug pull is basically the same thing, but with a brand new crypto coin. this is basically all meme coins.
these are both often accompanied by paying influencers to advertise the crypto to their fans, often without disclosing it’s a paid ad. a pump and dump example would be doge coin when elon musk pumped it, and there are several rug pulls in this thread recently
With new coins those that create the coin make sure they keep most of them for themselves and use their inside information to manipulate the value and choose the right moment to dump.
of course, there are probably many minor points and nuances i freely admit i may have gotten wrong with the above.
Why "now worthless"? That goes to the heart of the conceptual question I was asking.
(I mean, it's always been worthless, and always will be, in as much as it has no intrinsic value. But why is it any more worthless after the large operators sell, than before?)
(Or do you mean that if after the major operators exit, then if by simple demand and supply pressures the prices tank, then that's a pump and dump; and if, like bitcoin, it stays afloat, then it is not? ...Just trying to understand this clearly!)
Sorry, what insider info? Unlike stock, there's nothing actually happening there, no underlying business (unlike stock and credit) and no underlying economy (unlike fiat currency) in context of which something might happen, is there? No info at all, to crypto, as far as I can see, insider or otherwise! (Or do you mean information as regards money flows to and from the market, and/or new regulations and laws and such?)
it’s all, at best, a medium of exchange, right? nobody wants bitcoin or crypto, they want the dollars. so when the liquidity is gone, the cash, it’s worthless. they pump up the hype, get people to buy, and take all their cash back and the other buyers cash. all that’s left is crypto tokens. often people almost completely stop trading in them as well after the dump.
some of the crypto that’s been around a while, the “utility” crypto, is still traded after a big downturn. many are not.
but
i agree there isn’t any sound investment fundamentals behind any of it. i’m not an investment expert either so take it for what it’s worth.
They know exactly when the coin will be 'live' for trading and can put trades in to their software ready to pump and then at the right moment dump before trading even starts. Plus, they already own a huge percentage of the available coins so they win whatever happens.
Anything to do with Crypto is now just a huge scam and will be until it is properly regulated.