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That early morning spike in the market, many people immediately interpret it as a crash, but this judgment needs to be revised.
**A Precise Millisecond "Market Maker" Play**
At 2:17 AM, Bitcoin suddenly broke through the $87,000 mark, Ethereum fell below $2,700, and the entire network's long liquidation volume soared to tens of billions of dollars. It looked like a panic sell-off, but on-chain data tells a different story: all three major exchanges simultaneously saw large sell orders of around 1,000 BTC, the options market at the 2650 strike price was wiped clean, and USDC on-chain transfer volume surged to four times its normal level in the three minutes before the crash.
This isn't just retail investors panicking. It resembles a carefully orchestrated "explosion" by major players using algorithmic trading: first triggering high-leverage accounts with extreme market moves, then, after the top-tier funds are liquidated, sweeping up those floating chips at lower prices. Think about it—such synchronized large sell-offs without cooperation from multiple institutions would be nearly impossible.
Looking back at the November 2025 crash, where 400,000 traders were liquidated instantly, losing $1.9 billion, it was a systematic withdrawal of high-risk assets driven by the macro environment of the Federal Reserve's rate cut expectations. But this time, the play is even more aggressive: they didn't bother with macro excuses; they just openly conducted a shakeout.
**The "Run" Illusion in On-Chain Data**
Many retail investors panic when they see large transfers, thinking whales are about to run away. But if you truly understand on-chain data, you'll see that those large transfers are actually strategic cost swaps by the main players.
Take the recent example: a major exchange-related wallet showed abnormal activity—$3.53 million worth of WBTC transferred from a compliant platform to a new cold wallet address. Over the past 72 hours, this wallet has received 12,000 BTC, with an entry cost 4.2% lower than the current market price. Where's the sign of a run? Clearly, they are using market panic to transfer chips from exchanges to safer self-custody addresses, while also lowering their average cost.
The main players' tactics are nothing new: low-price accumulation, risk dispersion, and attracting follow-on orders. The early morning spike isn't so much a sign of collapse as it is a necessary step in the market maker's process.