What Is the Bitcoin $94K Spike: $68M Buy and $130M Liquidations Spark Manipulation Claims in December 2025

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On December 9, 2025, Bitcoin (BTC) rocketed from around $91,000 to over $94,000 in a blistering two-hour surge during U.S. trading hours, leaving traders stunned and social media ablaze with accusations of foul play.

With no apparent news catalyst—like Fed announcements or regulatory breakthroughs—the move wiped out over $130 million in leveraged positions across long and short trades, fitting the classic “liquidity hunt” pattern where whales trigger cascades to grab cheap stops. On-chain sleuths quickly pointed fingers at market maker Wintermute for a $68 million BTC buy in just one hour, alongside alleged coordinated purchases from giants like Coinbase, BitMEX, and Binance, fueling debates on whether this was organic momentum or engineered manipulation amid Bitcoin’s volatile year-end push.

What Happened in the $94K Bitcoin Surge

The spike unfolded rapidly between 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM ET, with BTC climbing 3.3% on volume spiking to $46 billion—unusually concentrated buys pushing through thin order books without broader market follow-through. No major headlines emerged: the Fed’s rate decision loomed, but pre-meeting chatter was muted, and on-chain metrics showed no whale transfers or ETF inflow spikes to justify the velocity. Instead, funding rates on perpetuals jumped 0.05% in minutes, signaling over-leveraged positions ripe for hunting.

Liquidation data from Coinglass revealed $130 million evaporated: $78 million in shorts above $93,500 and $52 million in longs below $91,000, creating a self-reinforcing cascade as forced sells bought the dip and vice versa. Traders like Vivek Sen on X called it “textbook engineered pump,” noting the lack of structure—vertical candles with immediate stalling, a hallmark of FOMO traps.

  • BTC +3.3% in 120 minutes, from $91,200 to $94,640
  • No news trigger; Fed cut priced at 87% via CME FedWatch
  • Volume anomaly: 70% buys clustered in 60-minute window
  • Post-spike retrace: BTC back to $93,200 within hours
  • Broader crypto: ETH +2.1%, SOL +1.8%, aligning with risk-on but lagging BTC

Allegations of Coordinated Manipulation by Wintermute and Others

On-chain analysts lit up X with evidence: DeFiTracer flagged Wintermute scooping 8,756 BTC (~$68 million at $92,000 average) in one hour via Coinbase Prime, while DefiWimar’s viral post claimed a “coordinated manipulation” involving 36,000+ BTC bought across platforms—Coinbase (8,241 BTC), BitMEX (7,610 BTC), Binance (4,500 BTC), Bitwise (3,857 BTC), and Bitfinex (3,003 BTC). This “exact reason why the market just pumped,” per Wimar.X, allegedly targeted liquidity pools above $93,000, triggering shorts before a quick unwind.

Wintermute, a top crypto market maker with $634 million in assets, has faced similar scrutiny in past crashes (e.g., October 2025’s $19B liquidation), but CEO Evgeny Gaevoy previously dismissed pauses as risk management, not malice. Critics argue this fits “liquidity hunting”: whales buy to hit stops, liquidate positions, then sell into the induced FOMO. Supporters counter it’s just efficient market-making in thin books.

  • Wintermute: $68M (8,756 BTC) in 60 minutes via OTC desks
  • Total alleged buys: ~36K BTC ($3.3B at peak) from 5+ exchanges
  • X buzz: #BTCmanipulation trends with 50K+ mentions in 24 hours
  • Defenses: “Normal arb in low-liquidity hours,” per Galaxy Digital
  • Historical parallel: Similar $2B liquidation probes in February 2025

The Liquidity Hunt Pattern: How Manipulation Works in Crypto

In crypto’s leveraged ecosystem, “liquidity hunting” exploits thin order books and high leverage (up to 100x on perps). Whales spot clustered stops—say, $10M in shorts at $93,500—and buy just enough to breach, cascading liquidations that auto-buy more BTC, amplifying the move. Here, the $130M wipeout (64% shorts) created artificial demand, but without follow-through volume, price stalled, allowing sellers to exit at highs.

This isn’t new: October 2025’s $19B crash saw market makers like Wintermute pause trading amid “violence and speed,” per strategist Jasper De Maere. With open interest at $35B and funding rates spiking, December’s spike mirrors weekend dumps (e.g., $171M longs liquidated December 7), where low liquidity amplifies manipulation risks.

  • Targets: Stop-loss clusters in thin books (e.g., $93K resistance)
  • Cascade effect: $78M short liqs auto-bought ~850 BTC
  • Unwind: Post-hunt sells retrace 50-70% of spike
  • Broader impact: Altcoins lag, DeFi yields dip on risk-off
  • Regulatory angle: CFTC probes similar events; GENIUS Act eyes reforms

Broader Market Context: Bitcoin’s 2025 Rollercoaster

Bitcoin’s year: ATH $126K (October) to $83K lows (early December), down 30% from peak amid Trump tariffs and Fed hawkishness. ETFs like BlackRock’s IBIT saw $5B inflows YTD but bled $200M last week, while corporate treasuries (e.g., MicroStrategy’s 660K BTC) provide floors. The spike aligned with equities (S&P +0.8%), but crypto’s beta amplified it—yet without catalysts like rate cuts (expected 25bps today), sustainability is questioned.

Analysts like Standard Chartered cut year-end targets to $100K from $200K, citing slowing ETF demand. Manipulation claims tie into 2025’s $40B total liquidations, underscoring leverage’s double-edge in decentralized finance.

  • YTD: BTC +45%, but -17% November on macro fears
  • OI: $35B perps, funding +0.05% (overbought signal)
  • ETF flows: Net +$50B, but weekly outflows signal caution
  • Wallet trends: Whales hold; retail FOMO via leverage
  • 2026 outlook: $120K base if Fed eases; manipulation risks persist

Bitcoin’s $94K spike—fueled by a $68M Wintermute buy and $130M liquidations—looks engineered to many, a liquidity hunt in thin books with no lasting catalyst. While it pumped shorts and sparked FOMO, the quick stall suggests whales cashed out, leaving traps for the unwary.

For traders navigating crypto volatility, monitor on-chain tools like DeFiTracer and secure wallets to avoid leverage pitfalls. As always, base decisions on fundamentals, not spikes—Bitcoin’s long game endures beyond manipulations.

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