I think this could be one of the major contributing factors to why Bitcoin’s price is falling when instead it should be rising.
1. The volume is ever increasing. The amount of people using it are ever increasing. The amount of shops and places it can be spent is ever increasing. This should mean the price should also be increasing, but it isn’t.
2. A lot of new money is coming in day by day. Under normal circumstances this should mean that the price would go up. And it would if it was a fair and regulated market, or at least a peer to peer market. But it isn’t regulated and some people aren’t playing fair.
3. There are major players at work that basically syphon off any new money coming in that should drive up the price, but instead that money just goes into the pockets of the big players.
4. This is happening through major exchanges that are being controlled by bots and operators of the exchanges having access to the backend of the exchanges. The tricks are fake volumes, fake buy/sell orders, and being able to sell to themselves at opportune times to get the best deals. As well as being able to see the behind the scene “trigger buy/sells” and pushing those through in different directions to the exchange operator's advantage.
In this article, there is an example of one day trader who is syphoning off money on his own, just through smart trades.
http://www.coindesk.com/predicting-bitcoins-next-price-rise/It states the following:
Mercede, who is CEO of Cryptocoin Capital Management (CCM), claims he has made an average return of between 8%–15% per day mostly by buying off Chinese exchanges and selling locally, or vice-versa.
“I can get some crazy returns right now,” said Mercede, who cited a trade this weekend where he purchased 20 BTC at $375 and resold the units at $560 to a client within hours. CCM has been executing similar trades for amounts up to 50 BTC per trade a number of times in September, according to Mercede.Now this is just one guy using his wit and good business skills to make money. In theory all that new money coming into bitcoin via him could have been driving the price up, but instead, the price stays the same and the extra money just goes into Mercede’s pocket. If it was just one guy doing this, it wouldn’t matter, but if it is done by operators controlling large percentages of trades, then it does.
Now Mercede doesn’t have backend control of an exchange. But imagine what he could do if he did. He could set up bots and fake buy and sell walls, knowing which ones were his and which were actually real, he could really syphon money off of many of the trades involving a lot of the new money. New money comes in, price of bitcoin stays the same, extra money goes into the pockets of the exchange owner.
On the flip side, when old money is going out, the exchange owner doesn’t do anything but let the price fall. So what we have is a scenario where hour by hour and day by day the price will slowly fall. That is until a huge rush of money comes in and the volume is so high that the real free market overtakes the exchange operator’s abilities to skim off the top and then the price of Bitcoin shoots up.
For me, watching this process is frustrating. I first watched bots on Gox like Willie artificially raise the price, and now the market makers and bots are strangling the life out of Bitcoin.
I think the only way to get around this is to have a real and honest exchange (dare I even say a regulated one). I am guessing Coinbase and Circle are maybe honest, but in a sea of dishonest exchanges, they can’t support the price of bitcoin that much.
If my theory is right, it would be easy to notice which ones are the more honest because they might usually be trading a few cents higher than the dishonest exchanges at most times. They would also be the first ones to move on price spikes and would be the exchanges driving the spikes.
I would love to see somebody more advanced than myself with math and programs be able to analyze this with real math.
I also think the answer would be a truly decentralized exchange with no centralized operator having backend access to the exchange to manipulate the prices. When real people trade with each other in a truly decentralized manner, than the real free market can take over.