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This wave of massive crash meme: 99% of people fell into the trap of public opinion
Recently, the market has experienced a downturn, and the “manipulation” scandal involving Jane Street has become a popular meme across the internet. But if you really think that’s the full story, then market opinion has once again successfully “hidden” the truth. I’ve analyzed key market data and institutional movements this week and found that this decline is far more complex than just a “single institution manipulation” meme—it’s not an exaggeration to say it involves billions.
Jane Street Is Just a Scapegoat Meme
On crypto Twitter, people have found a scapegoat, and Jane Street has been pushed into the spotlight. But the reality is: Bitcoin isn’t a meme coin, and it’s nearly impossible for a single institution to fully control the market.
Looking at macro-level pressures: tense geopolitical situations, tightening global liquidity, and panic spreading in the AI sector. These factors are enough to explain the current bear market trend—no conspiracy theories needed. Some people start shouting “bull market is back” after a single rebound, but that kind of thinking is really dangerous.
The true bottom of a bear market can only be confirmed by data, not by meme jokes or rumors.
The Real Dilemma of Corporate Reserves
Digital asset treasury companies (DATs) are undergoing unprecedented stress tests, which is the real concern in today’s market.
Nakamoto Inc’s stock price has plummeted 99.32% over 280 days, with unrealized losses on paper totaling $270 million. They bought 5,398 BTC near $118,000, almost perfectly hitting the cycle peak. No matter how you calculate it, that’s a bad look.
Even more worrying, Bitcoin treasury companies have experienced net selling for three consecutive weeks—something that’s never happened before in history. This isn’t just a technical correction; it’s a sign that institutional confidence is starting to waver.
Apart from companies like MicroStrategy with strong balance sheets, most DATs have limited resilience. In the face of a long-term bear market, they won’t last much longer.
Altcoins Are Testing Their Last Defense
If the difficulties faced by corporate treasuries are mainly at the institutional level, then the danger for altcoins is even more imminent.
Most mainstream altcoins are approaching the lower boundary of the Ichimoku cloud—breaking through this line would mean more than just a correction; it signals a structural trend shift. Major Layer-1s like Ethereum are weakening relative to Bitcoin, and high-beta altcoins show signs of exhaustion rather than accumulation.
This is a critical moment: either Bitcoin breaks upward, driving a rebound across the sector; or altcoins confirm a structural deterioration. There’s no third option.
The Real Battlefield: Stablecoins and Power Struggles
If the previous points are about “defense,” then the stablecoin sector is where the real “offense” is happening.
The true war isn’t about yields; it’s about control. Meta’s announcement to explore integrating stablecoins on Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, and Stripe’s interest in acquiring PayPal—what do these moves imply?
The real value of stablecoins isn’t financial innovation; it’s a redistribution of power. They shift authority from infrastructure gatekeepers to those controlling the wallets and consumer-facing services. Through stablecoins, consumer apps can become new super apps, enabling a complete repackage of financial services.
This is the real threat to traditional finance—not technology, but control over user access.
Rational Reassessment of AI Valuations
Even with Nvidia projecting a $780 billion outlook, market reactions remain lukewarm. What does this tell us? Investors are no longer buying into AI concepts at any price. They’re demanding real profitability evidence.
Revenue growth alone is no longer enough. When expectations are fully priced in, bubbles start to deflate. This isn’t the end of the AI hype; it’s the beginning of rational pricing and a move away from blind enthusiasm.
Signals Behind Institutional Defensive Postures
Connecting all these signals, the logic becomes clear:
Crypto hedge funds’ cash levels have reached 15.32%, near a one-year high. This isn’t panic; it’s defensive positioning. In an environment of high macro uncertainty, cash is king—especially for investors who can’t easily rotate into low-volatility sectors.
Even MicroStrategy’s CEO Saylor appears tense when facing the costs below his break-even point. Although he repeatedly claims that their debt structure can withstand Bitcoin dropping to $8,000, that kind of bravado hints at underlying unease.
Summary: Meme Rumors vs. Market Reality
Overall, this decline is far deeper than the “Jane Street manipulation” meme suggests. It reflects:
This isn’t manipulation; it’s the start of a structural adjustment. For those still looking for scapegoats, remember this framework—truth is often hidden behind meme images, while institutional data remains the most honest deceiver.
Market Snapshot:
What’s next? Stay tuned for my next analysis—where the real bottom signals are, and what the data will tell us.