No you cannot verify by trading lol, any more than you can verify the payout ratio of a slot machine at a rigged casino. They can synthesize opening and closing the orders, matching them internally, based off a feed from a legitimate exchange. Since they control everything they can easily ensure they don't accidentally get matched to an external order. This gives the illusion of liquidity.
>any more than you can verify the payout ratio of a slot machine at a rigged casino.
If I use a slot machine a million times and I get higher payouts than at the casino next door, why should I consider it rigged?
This is just nonsense. I am getting all the benefits of high liquidity and volume, my orders actually execute and I take advantage of the smaller spread. You can posit whatever you want, but the more likely explanation is that the volume is indeed higher.
They have not provided you with any reason to believe them. They won't even tell you where they're located lol.
This was a common growth hack for exchanges. When a new exchange launched they wanted to feign liquidity to establish a sense of credibility. They literally copied feeds from peer exchanges until they bootstrapped.
After all, why would anyone trade at an illiquid exchange? How do you get the first people onboard? You pretend you already have a lot of people onboard. More volume = more credibility.
The question you should ask yourself is if nobody is looking, why would they ever stop?
[note] by "growth hack" I mean literally a felony in any other context, but in the crypto space shrug who cares I guess. After all in which jurisdiction would you even sue them lol. Thanks to the "beauty of the blockchain" they won't even tell you where they're based.