7Newswire
06 Jan 2023, 21:21 GMT+10
Market manipulation refers to the act of artificially inflating or deflating the price of a security or otherwise influencing or manipulating the stock market behavior for personal gain. Tampering is illegal in most cases, but it can be difficult for regulators and other authorities to detect, as it has been in many cases.
Manipulation is also difficult for manipulators as the size and number of participants in the markets increases. For example, it is much easier to manipulate the price of shares of smaller companies, such as penny stocks, because they are not watched as closely by analysts and other market participants as the shares of large- and mid-cap companies. Manipulation is also called price manipulation, stock manipulation, and market manipulation.
Manipulation is usually difficult to detect, but it is also difficult for the manipulator as the size of the market and the number of participants increase OANDA review.
Two common types of stock manipulation are the "pump and dumb" and the "poop and scoop".
In the most regulated markets such as the stock and futures markets, manipulation is prohibited and prosecuted and can lead to legal consequences for the manipulators.
Currency manipulation is the deliberate devaluation of a nation's currency by a government.
Manipulation takes many forms in the markets. One way that people can lower the price of a security in the market is by placing hundreds of small orders at a price that is significantly lower than the asset's current price. This causes investors to get the impression that something is wrong in the market, so they sell and push prices even lower.
These manipulation techniques with bogus orders are often combined with the spread of false information through online channels and other media regularly used by other researchers. The external barrage of bad information is combined with seemingly legitimate market signals to encourage traders to buy or sell in a market.
The technique known as "pump and dump" is the most commonly used manipulation to inflate the value of a small-cap stock artificially and then start selling hard, leaving investors who entered late thinking the Bull Run was going to continue stuck in the market. An overvalued stock. This form of manipulation is also used in other markets, such as cryptocurrencies. It is not uncommon for Bitcoin whales to momentarily raise the price of the cryptocurrency to attract buyers so that at a certain point they start selling and trap a large number of buyers who have to sell to avoid massive losses. In this way, the whales gain from the market crash and can buy BTC at lower prices.
The opposite of "pump and dump" is the method known as "poop and scoop", although it is less common. This form of manipulation is used less because it's harder to make a legitimately good company look worse than it is to make an unknown company look awesome.
In futures markets, manipulation is prohibited and prosecuted and can lead to legal consequences for the manipulators.
Currency manipulation is the deliberate devaluation of a nation's currency by a government.
Manipulation takes many forms in the markets. One way that people can lower the price of a security in the market is by placing hundreds of small orders at a price that is significantly lower than the asset's current price. This causes investors to get the impression that something is wrong in the market, so they sell and push prices even lower.
Currency manipulation is a slightly different class of market manipulation in that only central banks and national governments can participate in it, and these are legal authorities themselves. Being the owner of a fiat (government-backed) currency legitimizes many of the actions these governments take to suppress or inflate the value of their currency compared to their peers. Although currency manipulation is not illegal, a country that is manipulating its currency can be accused by other nations or punished with sanctions approved by its trading partners.
In addition, international bodies such as the World Trade Organization (WTO) have been encouraged to play a greater role in addressing accusations of currency manipulation.
Devaluation is the way of manipulating a currency through the deliberate downward adjustment of the value of a country's currency relative to another currency, group of currencies, or monetary standard. The government that issues the currency decides to devalue its currency, and unlike depreciation, this loss in value is not the result of non-governmental activities.
One reason a country may devalue its currency is to reduce a trade imbalance. Devaluation lowers the cost of a country's exports, making them more competitive in the global market, which in turn increases the cost of imports, making domestic consumers less likely to buy them, and further strengthening companies' nationals. As exports increase and imports decrease, there is an improvement in the balance of payments by reducing trade deficits. That means that a country that devalues its currency can reduce its deficit due to strong demand for cheaper exports.
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