Questions rise as Justin Sun-linked HTX’s activities remain shrouded in mystery


Questions rise as Justin Sun-linked HTX’s activities remain shrouded in mystery



  • Around the time of Worldcoin’s launch, HTX’s market share dramatically spiked from 4% to almost 20%.
  • Intense selling of USDT in favor of USDC was seen on the exchange in the last three months.

The name may have changed but the seeds of suspicion surrounding the newly branded cryptocurrency exchange HTX [HT] continue to sprout. The actions of advisor Justin Sun, concerns of insolvency, and lack of transparency have made the Seychelles-based trading platform a big talking point in recent months.


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The latest bombshell was dropped by a research analyst from digital assets market data provider Kaiko, who drew attention to some unusual activities on the exchange.

Wash trading at HTX?

Earlier in July, the crypto industry witnessed the launch of the controversial but hugely popular Worldcoin [WLD]. HTX, then Huobi, was among the first to list the coin and open it for trading.

However, soon after listing, clusters of matching buys and sells were discovered on the exchange, as indicated below.

According to Kaiko, when trades are perfectly balanced between buys and sells, it is a symptom of artificial volume, often known as wash trading in trading parlance.

Source: Kaiko

As is well known, wash trading involves artificially inflating volumes by buying and selling an asset at the exact same time on an exchange. Exchanges and token projects have a lot to gain from this market manipulation.

Firstly, a token with a higher trade volume would attract new investors. This is especially true for the novice ones who rely more on trading activity than research before selecting an asset to invest in.

Secondly, high volumes of token projects would also boost overall volume figures for the exchange. This, in turn, would push the exchange up on the rankings table, making it look more popular and credible.

New token projects generally prefer exchanges with higher volumes to list the token. Thus, exchanges stand to profit significantly from token listing fees, which may be significant in a bear market where volumes are already subdued.

Inorganic jump in market share

Interestingly, around the time of WLD’s launch, HTX’s market share spiked from 4% to almost 20%. This was despite the fact that none of the other major exchanges saw a similar surge in volume.

As there was no other credible explanation for HTX’s case, the mystery deepened.

Source: Kaiko

Additionally, the surge was driven by low cap altcoins i.e., assets with an aggregated volume of less than $1 billion from March to October. During the aforementioned July phase, the volume of these assets surged from $1.4 billion to $3.4 billion in a week.

Similar behavior was seen in the trajectory of large cap altcoins, which experienced a 5x jump in weekly volume. To the contrary, top assets of the market like Bitcoin [BTC] and Ethereum [ETH] weren’t impacted at all.

These observations were in line with arguments made earlier in the article about wash trading employed by newly launched altcoins.

Source: Kaiko

Increase in USDT depegs

Another anomaly spotted with HTX was the high number of stablecoin Tether [USDT] depegs. According to the report, the depegs were a result of intense selling of USDT in favor of another stablecoin USD Coin [USDC].

In fact, USDT worth $350 million was redeemed for USDC since the beginning of July. What created more doubt was that nearly $400 million in USDC flew from HTX’s wallets to Binance around the same time.

Source: Kaiko

But what could possibly explain this?

Justin Sun in the eye of the storm

Bitcoin expert Dylan LeClair took to X a few days ago, accusing HTX advisor Justin Sun of creating a ‘web of deception’ to drain USD liquidity from the crypto ecosystem through USDC.


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In a scathing thread, LeClair alleged that the founder of Tron [TRX] used the USDT brand to swap it for fake stUSDT while it appears as regular USDT in the UI/UX on HTX. Note that stUSDT was a staked version of USDT, offered by Justin Sun-owned lending platform JustLend.

These dubious activities have brought HTX to the center of limelight. The HTX management, including Justin Sun, was yet to publicly refute these charges or provide clarification on the inorganic trading activity.





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