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by gzer0 1932 days ago
This situation is quite different than that of Tesla and Elon Musk.

1. Mcafee was an individual that pumped the price and sold his position for realized gains.

2. Tesla is a publicly traded company, which made all of the regulatory and legal filings necessary for the purchase of their crypto.

3. Tesla has no forseeable plans to exit their position.

4. This article isn't telling the entire story. Mcafee was also indicted for Tax evasion, which Elon Musk nor Tesla are committing.

[1] https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/john-mcafee-indicted-tax-evas...

4 comments

Musk pumped Dogecoin as a joke to prime media radar for Tesla's bitcoin purchase disclosure.

It was in effect a bitcoin pump with dogecoin as a media lure, which given Musk's ability to command attention was nearly as effective e (for TSLA) as pumping bitcoin directly, but without breaking any SEC rules.

"Without breaking any SEC rules" seems like a perfectly good reason not to indict.
Right, but a "pump and dump" scheme requires two things which Tesla/Musk did not do: make knowingly false statements of fact about Dogecoin or Bitcoin, and a "dump" of the assets at inflated values (as it appears that Tesla/Musk still retain their previously announced Bitcoin holdings).
What about tweets like "Dogecoin is the people’s crypto"?

https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1357241340313141249

Did Musk dump a bunch of Doge on people? I think that's the big difference.
Do you know he did not?
I don’t think anyone does, but in America one is innocent until proven guilty and not the other way around.
Are you accusing him based on no evidence or what is your point her? Of course he doesn't have prove that something didn't happen.
It is a bit of understated wit of a backhanded compliment given its value is so low everybody can afford it. A massive surge in value is going to over five cents per coin. Of course ironically that makes it a better actual currency instead of a speculation vehicle in spite of being easily mineable by design.
So when they DO make forseeable plans and execute those plans to sell, then it will have happened “after” they pumped BTC. How long should a company hold before a pump and dump become fine?
"According to the indictment, McAfee allegedly evaded his tax liability by directing his income to be paid into bank accounts and cryptocurrency exchange accounts in the names of nominees."

John Mcafee was breaking US law and got caught.

You wait until your previous comments don't have an outsized effect on the market price anymore.
What pump and dump are you talking about?
Pump = buy a lot of something so the price goes up. Let's say $2 billion of it

<wait for more people to buy it as a result of the price movement, and news, etc.>

Dump = sell at the higher prices and match the increased demand

This is whats being advocated by market analysts, and it would be considered "fine": https://www.benzinga.com/analyst-ratings/analyst-color/21/03...

If companies don't collude but do it in a sequence, then when does it become ok?

As a different example, in 2014 employees alleged that Silicon Valley companies colluded to depress their wages, by acting like a cartel:

https://equitablegrowth.org/aftermath-wage-collusion-silicon...

But cartels can form without having to collude, merely by people acting in concert on a meme or belief (like HODL or SQUEEZE THE SQUOZE) and this seems fine!

https://arxiv.org/abs/1201.3798

A pump and dump scheme requires that the "pump" be achieved by making fraudulent representations about the assets being "pumped" to artificially increase their value, followed by said assets being offloaded at the artificially increased value.

McAfee did that all of that. Tesla/Musk did not (no false statements of fact or offloading at artificially inflated values).

Additionally, a "cartel" has a legal definition which requires deliberate coordination of activity (aka "collusion"). Independent activity in which everyone does the same thing without coordination is not a cartel, because the coordination aspect of it is key to the illegality of the act.

So a group of people pumping a cryptocurrency by buying it, and then letting the skyrocketing charts in exchanges and news about it bring new people into the mix, and then selling, is totally fine? Even if this group of people coordinates their activities?
As you wrote it, yes it is completely fine.
> 4. This article isn't telling the entire story. Mcafee was also indicted for Tax evasion, which Elon Musk nor Tesla are committing.

They probably are, but neither Tesla or Musk are in the Governments / Deep State crooshair, quite the opposite actually, they the modern times poster Stakhanovites.

I know you’re being downvoted for the deep state comment, but for the most part you are correct: Federal Prosecutors routinely target high profile individuals and those that receive negative press.
Musk is incredibly high profile and regularly receives negative press.
I know Musk isn't exactly conventionally sane and tends to be erratic but tax evasion while trying to surplant big oil and muscling in on the auto industry, and grabbing space launche business from Russia would be a downright /stupid/ move.
You cannot reach the level Musk has reach without using all the tools to reach these levels, including tax evasions... with the complicit agreement of many "people in power". It just happens their interest coincide today, tomorrow's another day, interest shifts.