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Traders Are Selling Themselves Their Own NFTs To Drive Up Prices (engadget.com) 146

The NFT marketplace is rife with people buying their own NFTs in order to drive up prices, according to a report released this week by blockchain data firm Chainalysis. Engadget reports: Known as "wash trading," the act of buying and selling a security in order to fool the market was once commonplace on Wall Street, and has been illegal for nearly a century. But the vast, unregulated NFT marketplace has shown to be a golden opportunity for scammers. The report tracked instances of the same traders selling the same NFTs back and forth at least 25 times, a likely incident of wash trading. It identified a group of 110 alleged NFT wash traders who have made roughly $8.9 million in profit from this practice. Researchers also discovered significant evidence of money laundering in the NFT marketplace in the last half of 2021. The value sent to NFT marketplaces by addresses associated with scams spiked significantly in the third quarter of 2021, worth more than $1 million worth of cryptocurrency, according to the report. Roughly $1.4 million dollars of sales in the fourth quarter of 2021 came from such illicit addresses. "NFT wash trading exists in a murky legal area. While wash trading is prohibited in conventional securities and futures, wash trading involving NFTs has yet to be the subject of an enforcement action," wrote the authors of the report.
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Traders Are Selling Themselves Their Own NFTs To Drive Up Prices

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  • by khchung ( 462899 ) on Friday February 04, 2022 @07:51PM (#62238923) Journal

    means that all the tricks made illegal in past can be used again.

    Who, except the scammers, would think that is a good idea?

    • by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Friday February 04, 2022 @07:59PM (#62238943)

      But dont forget, its The Man who wants to steal your money, not these people

      • by Pseudonym ( 62607 ) on Friday February 04, 2022 @08:48PM (#62239029)

        That's the beauty of DeFi: The Man is now decentralised. The kind of grift that was previously only available to the ultra-wealthy is now available to the merely-affluent.

        Everyone knows that the problem with the old neoliberal financial system was that not enough people got their turn to be the boot.

        • DeFi is promoted by the sort of asshole who thinks the only problem with feudalism is they wouldn't get to be the lord.
      • by Tom ( 822 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @01:25AM (#62239411) Homepage Journal

        I know it's meant as a joke.

        But this is seriously what I don't get about everyone warning you about everything:

        Why can't they BOTH want?

        It's always as if saying "but it's really the government that's evil" means that corporations aren't. Or as if saying "corporations want to exploit you" means the government doesn't. But most of the time, what we see is two evils fighting over who gets to enslave us. Maybe we've all seen too much Hollywood with the good vs. evil cliche?

        • Good vs evil is ingrained into the Abraham religous areas. It is a core concept of all religions of Abraham.

          Other cultures have a more open view of their gods that are more blended and less clear cut.

          If you dont know what is a religion of abraham, then you havent studied them enough.

          • by theCoder ( 23772 ) on Saturday February 05, 2022 @08:09AM (#62239865) Homepage Journal

            Interesting that you should bring up religion, especially Abrahamic religions into a finance discussion. Those religions typically have a belief that God will punish people who do wrong. This enabled people of those religions to trade much more freely at a time when governments were not as strong. Without a strong government to enforce contracts and punish fraud and the like, there was much more risk in traveling to a distant village where you did not know anyone and trading. But if both parties knew that the other believed in a God that would punish bad behavior, they could better trust in each other.

            Even in Christianity, where forgiveness is a central tenet, what tended to be preached for many centuries was very "law" based -- if you sin, you will be punished (unless you had money, in which case you could buy your way out of Hell). It wasn't until the 1500s, when at least in Europe there were stronger governments to enforce good behavior, that protestant revolution occurred, which reintroduced the "gospel" part to the religion.

            I haven't made a thorough study of this; I've just heard the concept in a podcast, and it was intriguing. As the podcast pointed out, the system is somewhat Darwinian. It's not that the religions were designed to meet this need, but because they did, they and the societies that embraced them thrived at the expense of other belief systems and societies.

          • by Tom ( 822 )

            Good vs evil is ingrained into the Abraham religous areas. It is a core concept of all religions of Abraham.

            That is true, though they didn't appear out of nowhere, either. Ancient Greece had a much more nuanced view, and so did Ancient Persia and Ancient Egypt. So where in the desert inbetween was the ability to think in shades of grey lost?

        • I think the applicable cliche is "Two wrongs don't make a right."

      • But dont forget, its The Man who wants to steal your money, not these people

        Well ...

        NFTs: I point, laugh, and ignore. And lose no money to them at all.

        The Taxman: Not so much.

        (Those notorious right-wing fanatics The Beatles agree with me ... )

    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 04, 2022 @08:02PM (#62238945)

      Just charge them sales tax, and make sure they report the sales on their taxes. That shit will end in an instant.

      • by Lisandro ( 799651 ) on Friday February 04, 2022 @08:15PM (#62238971)

        Just charge them sales tax, and make sure they report the sales on their taxes. That shit will end in an instant.

        Oh, this will happen sooner than later, IMHO. Purchasing a digital asset is a taxable event, so every time you shuffle your NFTs between wallets you end up owing money to the tax man - and he doesn't take crypto.

        Making purchases between accounts you own, in a medium where all transactions are public and forever recorded is... well, not smart.

      • by narcc ( 412956 )

        Just charge them sales tax, and make sure they report the sales on their taxes. That shit will end in an instant.

        No, it won't. This is a very old scam. We've see it countless times, from fine art and old coins to comic books and video games. If you think an additional 6% is going to make any difference, you're out of your mind.

        They're taking something worth nothing and driving up the "value" potentially into the millions.

        • No, it won't. This is a very old scam. We've see it countless times, from fine art and old coins to comic books and video games. If you think an additional 6% is going to make any difference, you're out of your mind.

          Not really, but it shows that you don't understand how the scam works.

          I heard about this happening quite some time ago earlier, when a NFT was traded with the funds originating and being delivered to the same wallet in the same block, through some sort of instantaneous loan scheme. Basically, obviously a wash sale if you examined the crypto flow. Remember, crypto is NOT anonymous; everything can be tracked forever!

          Okay, to explain why a sales tax would certainly work to discourage this stuff, if it's char

          • by narcc ( 412956 )

            Not really, but it shows that you don't understand how the scam works.

            I was thinking the exact same thing.

    • Libertarians.
    • just wait for them to do hardtime and get asked what are they in for?

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      That's how it's designed to work. Code is law, and if they code is buggy then exploiting it is completely legal and expected behaviour.

      Actually that's kinda like the real world with loopholes in real laws, as often as not put there deliberately.

    • by Rinikusu ( 28164 )

      Seriously, watching the scammers, pumpers, etc move from penny stocks into crypto using the exact same tactics has been pretty fascinating.

    • Is NFT even finance? It sounds more like trading baseball cards.

  • No risk. And not real money.
  • A wholy unregulated securities market is a bad thing. And almost as if there was a reason why we created regulations for our securities market...

    I've said it before and I'll say it again, regulations are written in blood. The only question is whose blood and how many people are going to jump out of Windows over this?
    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      how many people are going to jump out of Windows

      Very few if they keep moving the latch every new version.

    • Re:It's almost as if (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Pseudonym ( 62607 ) on Friday February 04, 2022 @08:56PM (#62239045)

      There is a softer and more slow-motion form of wash trading that is already rampant in the "legitimate" art market. Ultra-wealthy people with a large collection of, say, Andy Warhol prints, will buy another at a highly inflated price because it makes their existing collection worth more. If you can successfully claim that NFTs are "art" rather than securities, it seems likely that this might resist regulation for a bit longer than we might hope.

      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        There's nothing soft about the wash trading in the art market. I guess it's slower though.

        Everyone in art knows it's corrupt as hell, and most of them will freely admit it.

      • I gotta say though, even if the owner of a bunch of paintings buys another to "increase the value of his collection", even at an inflated price, that still isn't a "wash sale". It'd be a wash sale if you took your $1M(invested) art piece and sold it to your non-estranged wife for $10M(on paper), with the $10M coming from shared funds and going right back to shared funds. You announce that you "sold" that piece for $10M to an unnamed buyer. Later, you offer different pieces of art from that collector to t

  • The Wild West (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rgmoore ( 133276 ) <glandauer@charter.net> on Friday February 04, 2022 @08:04PM (#62238951) Homepage

    This gets back to the most basic thing to understand about cryptocurrency and the whole economy surrounding it. The whole point of crypto is to recreate the existing economy but call everything by new names so they can claim existing laws don't apply. The main reason those laws were enacted is to keep con artists from robbing everyone else blind. Maybe crypto will succeed and maybe it won't, but nobody should put any money they can't afford to lose into crypto until there is some reasonable regulation in place.

    • by Tom ( 822 )

      nobody should put any money they can't afford to lose into crypto until

      Wrong tense. Nobody should put any money into crypto anymore.

      Like any good pyramid scheme, you could seriously profit from it as long as you got in early. It's not early anymore.

      Do I wish I bought a ton of Bitcoin back when they were a few bucks? Sure I do. Am I stupid enough to think that means I should buy a ton of them now? Hell no!

  • Really? (Score:5, Funny)

    by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Friday February 04, 2022 @08:06PM (#62238953)

    Researchers also discovered significant evidence of money laundering in the NFT marketplac

    A completely unregulated market is complicit in money laundering? Who could have possibly seen this? It's unimaginable.

    • Money laundering is when you use a legit looking business to clean money for a shady enterprise. Is the NFT marketplace supposed to be the legit looking business or the shady enterprise?
      • by hey! ( 33014 )

        Not really. You just have to break the chain that leads from the crime the beneficiary. It doesn't matter if the beneficiary looks shady, what matters is what you can prove.

        • Right, but if your money looks shady, then it hasn't been laundered. You can't just use money laundering interchangeably with scam or fraud.
      • Money laundering is when you use a legit looking business to clean money for a shady enterprise. Is the NFT marketplace supposed to be the legit looking business or the shady enterprise?

        NFTR marketplace is mutual mental masturbation. As legit as that love affair you and that woman you saw on Pornhub are having.

        • NFTR marketplace is mutual mental masturbation. As legit as that love affair you and that woman you saw on Pornhub are having.

          Seriously, a doubt of investment for any reason is seen as being a plant for The Man.

          • NFTR marketplace is mutual mental masturbation. As legit as that love affair you and that woman you saw on Pornhub are having.

            Seriously, a doubt of investment for any reason is seen as being a plant for The Man.

            I could be yaknow!

    • Here is the best video on NFTs I’ve seen.
      Strap in, it’s a wild ride.
      https://youtu.be/YQ_xWvX1n9g [youtu.be]

  • by BoRegardless ( 721219 ) on Friday February 04, 2022 @08:10PM (#62238963)

    If you hype it enough, they will come!

  • Um, this is news? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Lisandro ( 799651 ) on Friday February 04, 2022 @08:13PM (#62238965)

    Wash trading is rampant in the NFT world. A lot of people are going to face an interesting tax season this year, because if the IRS happens to link you to the wallets used to pump your ape jpeg, each and every transaction between them counts as a taxable short-term gain.

    Mind you, this is not exclusive of the NFT scene either. People launching new cryptocurrencies/tokens actively tell you about their plans to pump their value nowadays. It's considered a good sign!

    • Re:Um, this is news? (Score:4, Informative)

      by denzacar ( 181829 ) on Friday February 04, 2022 @08:21PM (#62238987) Journal

      Exactly. [youtu.be]

      • God, that video is so good.

        It was hilarious to see a shitload of YouTube crypto shills coming up with replies boiling down to "ah, this guy is wrong! come debate us!".

      • Folding Ideas is one of my favorite YT channels. I realize this video is slightly biased, but the points he's making are pretty salient and sensible. And he's funny as hell.

    • Wash trades are always at a loss. There's no tax liability. A wash trader with a good accountant could even carry the loss forward to later tax years to defray actual gains.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by h33t l4x0r ( 4107715 )
      I can understand how dumb people will think that wash trading is rampant. Look at the numbers though. If $1M seems rampant to you, you're a hick, and if you're not considering the real cost in gas fees of moving floor price for a nft collection, you're a retard. No offense.

      You're probably a nice guy but you are out of your depth in this conversation and you should avoid talking about crypto in general because it makes you sound like a fucking idiot. And yes I see you are modded up to +5 which means you're
      • I can understand how dumb people will think that wash trading is rampant. Look at the numbers though. If $1M seems rampant to you, you're a hick, and if you're not considering the real cost in gas fees of moving floor price for a nft collection, you're a retard. No offense.

        Fuck you, i do take offense. Did you even bother to READ the articles linked to this story? Because yes, people do spend a shitload of money in ETH gas fees and, yes, most do this at a loss. This is people trying to make a profit of shitty procedural JPGs, so we're not exactly talking about quantum physicists here.

        Not yours, though. Yours are super cool dude.

    • by Xenna ( 37238 )

      The crypto markets are global. The IRS may count this as a taxable event, but the IRS is meaningless in the rest of the world.

      This is not a taxable event in my country.

  • by DrMrLordX ( 559371 ) on Friday February 04, 2022 @08:45PM (#62239023)

    In most crypto markets, it's easy to spot wash trading: mysterious low-volume transactions that occur without ever appearing on the books long enough for anyone else to fill the buy or sell offer. By definition, these trades are low in volume. Price discovery achieved through wash trading is flimsy. It doesn't hold up to serious volume. You can sucker people who are impatient and desperate to buy/sell by goading them in a particular direction with wash trades and other forms of order book manipulation. For the patient and/or for those trading in larger volumes, such shenanigans are of little threat.

    NFTs are different in that there's only ever one copy of any given NFT, so its price history will be defined by low-volume trading. Still, a disciplined trader will know better than to chase an NFT whose value outpaces the rest of the market for no discernible reason.

    Truth be told though, NFTs are purely-speculative anyway, having no utility function whatsoever (versus numerous blockchain tokens that are at least nominally useful for on-chain governance and other applications). Probably best not to trade in NFTs.

    • In most crypto markets, it's easy to spot wash trading: mysterious low-volume transactions that occur without ever appearing on the books long enough for anyone else to fill the buy or sell offer. By definition, these trades are low in volume. Price discovery achieved through wash trading is flimsy. It doesn't hold up to serious volume. You can sucker people who are impatient and desperate to buy/sell by goading them in a particular direction with wash trades and other forms of order book manipulation. For the patient and/or for those trading in larger volumes, such shenanigans are of little threat.

      NFTs are different in that there's only ever one copy of any given NFT, so its price history will be defined by low-volume trading. Still, a disciplined trader will know better than to chase an NFT whose value outpaces the rest of the market for no discernible reason.

      NFT's are a form of "art" (well speculation masquerading as art), meaning the value of a piece is set by the community. The price you pay for a piece is influenced by the market price for similar pieces. So lets say you went through the history of every similar piece to eliminate the ones driven up (even slightly) with wash trading. How do you know that the legitimate buyers of the remaining pieces you look at weren't themselves influenced by the prices set in wash trades of other pieces?

      Wash trading doesn'

      • The answer is, "buy none of them". If the market's price discovery is that poisonous then just don't spend any money.

  • As they don't have a soul to sell, they sold their grandmothers years back.
  • by flug ( 589009 ) on Friday February 04, 2022 @09:07PM (#62239071)

    "NFT wash trading exists in a murky legal area."

    Um, yeah, no.

    It's not murky, it's just straight-up illegal.

    The CFTC first determined that Bitcoin and other virtual currencies are properly defined as “commodities” under the CEA in 2015 . . . : “The definition of a “commodity” is broad [...] Bitcoin and other virtual currencies are encompassed in the definition and properly defined as commodities."

    See the full report from Allen & Overy here [allenovery.com].

    It will be interesting to see when some enforcement hammers start coming down on this type of illegal behavior. But there is no question whatsoever that it is, indeed, illegal.

  • As if those little grainy images are worth millions. It is obviously a scam.
  • I am truly shocked, how can it be true that a completely unregulated market is full of cheats and scammers looking to screw people out of money! surely this can't happen as it is the government that is corrupt and evil.
  • HONK HONK HONK :slap:

    Waiting for the NFT Bozo Show to come to it's spectacular crash and burning end.

  • Who knew that such a thieves' bazaar would spawn exponentially more exravagant kinds of deception?

    • More accurately, it’s a market in receipts for pictures of tulips; you don’t even own the picture itself. And as people have pointed out, the blockchain has no useful API that lets you verify ownership of an NFT, so almost all applications dealing with NFT use a centralised service for this. There’s only a handful of them, and they can (and have!) delist NFTs considered “harmful or infringing on IP”, which means that your apps and that NFT-enabled smart TV will no longer show t
  • NFT "investors" would be strong contenders for gold

  • Jack bought magic beans with the money his mom gave him
  • Good and this is why (Score:4, Interesting)

    by couchslug ( 175151 ) on Friday February 04, 2022 @11:58PM (#62239261)

    NFTs serve no useful legitimate purpose.

    Their buyers deserve to be defrauded because they are bad people for promoting such nonsense. The appropriate response is laughter.

    I for one will remain unaffected because I don't play that shit.

    • NFTs serve no useful legitimate purpose.

      Their buyers deserve to be defrauded because they are bad people for promoting such nonsense. The appropriate response is laughter.

      I for one will remain unaffected because I don't play that shit.

      Is it not the sellers who are bad people?

      The buyers are just gullible, buying into the latest ponzi scheme. I've had plenty of people - my wife included - ask if they should buy NFTs because "they're the next big thing." It's not until you explain what an NFT is (well, isn't, really since they're No Fricking Thing) and what crypto really is that these people say "oh, that's not good."

  • by Tom ( 822 )

    Of course they do. I'm sure that's the top of the iceberg. NFTs are essentially a scam, or at least a tool that has vastly more scamming than honest use-case potential, so we shouldn't be surprised that the whole thing is neck-deep in shit, trickery, deceit and get-quick-rich scheming.

    The real question is: Why do we on /. care for that?

  • If you pump your NFT from $1 to $100,000 by trading amongst your sock puppets, then you'll owe capital-gains taxes on the gains between where you first bought in and where you last sold out (and bought in, obviously). Then, since the value provided is more artificial than normal, you risk having the NFT drop back to $1. If you happen to figure out in January of 2023 that you owe taxes on $99,999 in gains, you can sell your NFT for $1, and ... you're in some trouble.

    Of course, having sold for $1, now you h

  • Non-fungible Tokens...the name itself says it all. How could you possibly trust anything with most of the words "toe" and "fungus" in the name?

  • Oh, cryptocurrency, is there nothing you can't turn into a scam?

  • To insider trading.

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