By the same argument, there is nothing to suggest that Madoff was a ponzi, because nobody knew how he was offering his returns and there was no evidence of the trades required to generate the profit to fund those returns.
Correct, however there was much more
substantial proof surrounding the Madoff situation, in addition to several opportunities for direct access to records by regulators. As far as I know, there were no other profit-generating business operations than the fund.
When Markopolos got his hands on a copy of Madoff's revenue stream, he suspected problems almost immediately. To his mind, Madoff's strategy was so poorly structured that on paper, it couldn't possibly make money. Additionally, his return stream rose upward with only a few downticksa nearly perfect 45-degree angle. Markopolos knew that the markets were too volatile even in the best of conditions for this to be possible. He believed there were only two ways to explain the figureseither Madoff was running a Ponzi scheme (by paying established clients with newer clients' money) or front running (buying stock for his own account based on knowledge about his clients' orders). Either way, Markopolos believed there was no legal way for Madoff to deliver his purported returns. Markopolos later said that he knew within five minutes that Madoff's numbers didn't add up. It took him another four hours to prove that they could have only been obtained through fraud.[14][15]
Despite this, Markopolos' bosses at Rampart asked Markopolos to deconstruct Madoff's strategy to see if he could replicate it. Again and again, he could not simulate Madoff's returns, using information he had gathered about Madoff's trades in stocks and options. For instance, he discovered that for Madoff's strategy to work, he would have had to buy more options on the Chicago Board Options Exchange than actually existed.[14] He also couldn't find any evidence the market was responding to any Madoff trades, even though by his estimate Madoff was running as much as $6 billionfar more money than any known hedge fund even then. In Markopolos' mind, this suggested that Madoff wasn't even trading.
From the bolded sections above, a Ponzi was not the only possibility, despite all of them being illegal. What Pirate is doing may well be illegal in
traditional markets, but Bitcoin is unregulated and even if it were, proof would be difficult to come by.
If I am correct in that Pirate's operation is similar to the gold and other market management being executed by the BIS, and his actions would be considered fraudulent according to contemporary finance, then the entire traditional system is fraudulent.
Finally, is such activity (not the Ponzi) necessarily fraudulent if it serves to promote growth and provide stability in a market? Is it possible that this may even be a
natural progression? Not a black & white issue anymore.
Can anyone present evidence of trade that BTCST is doing?
There's no way to directly link blockchain transactions to all BTCS&T related activity when taking into account offline exchanges. What we
can estimate within a reasonable level of confidence is the
volume necessary, and that is within the realm of possibility as far as current levels go.
I avoided investing in Hashking's ventures precisely because he doesn't give away enough details, and I wouldn't be able to find him if he ran with investors' cash.
Patrick's easier to find, more willing to communicate information and has transparent financials for his BTC payday loans operation if you ask for them.
Even Hashking gives out an awful lot more info than Pirate though.
It's been pointed out that all of Madoff's information was public record for the duration of the fraud...
This all comes back to trust - counterparty risk. There's never any way to be absolutely sure of any investment until it either fails, blows up, or you end the involvement.