Market Deep Dive: Behind Bitcoin's 10% Crash Is a Precise Retail Investor Harvesting Operation
Bitcoin's recent drop of $9,000, approaching a 10% decline, is not merely market volatility but a targeted, exchange-led operation aimed at retail investors.
Two sets of data point to abnormal activity: First, over the past 24 hours, the total liquidations across the network's futures contracts reached $2.544 billion; second, during a sluggish trading Saturday, one exchange saw a $1 billion Bitcoin sell order, at a time when the market had almost no effective buy-side support—such an operation is inherently suspicious.
Normally, Bitcoin whales selling large amounts of tokens would choose ETF channels or OTC trades to lock in the best prices and avoid market impact. But this $1 billion sell order disregards slippage costs and deliberately dumps at a low price, violating the basic logic of whale trading. The answer is clear: this is a premeditated market manipulation aimed at harvesting retail investors.
Why choose Saturday? The core reason is that weekend market liquidity drops to its lowest point. Professional market makers significantly reduce trading activity on weekends, and bank closures prevent fiat from flowing into exchanges. Meanwhile, ETFs like BlackRock's iBIT, which have large Bitcoin holdings, only operate during regular US stock trading hours (Monday to Friday). With almost no institutional funds backing the market on weekends, the impact of such sell-offs is greatly amplified.
The logic behind this operation is very straightforward: in a liquidity-starved weekend, a $1 billion spot sell-off can trigger liquidations 3-5 times the size of the sell order, creating a negative feedback loop of "sell-off - liquidation - further sell-off."
The profit logic for the manipulators is a classic "spot sell-off, futures harvesting": by pre-positioning massive short positions in derivatives markets, even if the spot sell-off causes $50 million in slippage losses, they can profit from Bitcoin's 10% decline in the futures market, earning $500 million in huge profits, turning small costs into big gains.
It is worth noting that only exchanges with open order books, like , can directly dump and create a market-wide price linkage, transmitting the downward effect across the entire crypto market. Here, we also advise such leading exchanges to abandon these market manipulation behaviors; a market that loses investor trust will ultimately not last.
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Market Deep Dive: Behind Bitcoin's 10% Crash Is a Precise Retail Investor Harvesting Operation
Bitcoin's recent drop of $9,000, approaching a 10% decline, is not merely market volatility but a targeted, exchange-led operation aimed at retail investors.
Two sets of data point to abnormal activity: First, over the past 24 hours, the total liquidations across the network's futures contracts reached $2.544 billion; second, during a sluggish trading Saturday, one exchange saw a $1 billion Bitcoin sell order, at a time when the market had almost no effective buy-side support—such an operation is inherently suspicious.
Normally, Bitcoin whales selling large amounts of tokens would choose ETF channels or OTC trades to lock in the best prices and avoid market impact. But this $1 billion sell order disregards slippage costs and deliberately dumps at a low price, violating the basic logic of whale trading. The answer is clear: this is a premeditated market manipulation aimed at harvesting retail investors.
Why choose Saturday? The core reason is that weekend market liquidity drops to its lowest point. Professional market makers significantly reduce trading activity on weekends, and bank closures prevent fiat from flowing into exchanges. Meanwhile, ETFs like BlackRock's iBIT, which have large Bitcoin holdings, only operate during regular US stock trading hours (Monday to Friday). With almost no institutional funds backing the market on weekends, the impact of such sell-offs is greatly amplified.
The logic behind this operation is very straightforward: in a liquidity-starved weekend, a $1 billion spot sell-off can trigger liquidations 3-5 times the size of the sell order, creating a negative feedback loop of "sell-off - liquidation - further sell-off."
The profit logic for the manipulators is a classic "spot sell-off, futures harvesting": by pre-positioning massive short positions in derivatives markets, even if the spot sell-off causes $50 million in slippage losses, they can profit from Bitcoin's 10% decline in the futures market, earning $500 million in huge profits, turning small costs into big gains.
It is worth noting that only exchanges with open order books, like , can directly dump and create a market-wide price linkage, transmitting the downward effect across the entire crypto market. Here, we also advise such leading exchanges to abandon these market manipulation behaviors; a market that loses investor trust will ultimately not last.