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December 06, 2013, 10:02:13 AM |
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I think the method you described is extraordinarily risky, because if the price doesn't get moved into a downward trend, then the seller loses a lot of money.
They might actually split their sell into multiple smaller chunks, submitting them at regular intervals so that it appears the price is naturally trending down.
Another way a seller can manipulate the price more safely is by using fake buy walls. If the seller places a huge buy order at a safe distance from the current price (so it doesn't get executed), other participants will come in to place their orders above this wall (which is seen as a huge vote of confidence in a coming up-trend) in order for them to get executed sooner. This can cascade into an upward trend in price with multiple buyers wanting to get in on the action, all without the manipulator actually trading anything.
Then, once the price is high enough, the seller removes the buy wall, and executes a market sell order, which he will then profit from.
Cheers, Paul.
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