Blockchain analytics firm Arkham Intelligence has raised concerns over unusual trading behavior in the JELLYJELLY (JELLY) token, warning that recent derivatives activity resembles patterns commonly associated with coordinated price manipulation.
According to Arkham’s monitoring data, the spike is not random volatility. Instead, it reflects a structured buildup across both futures and spot markets that could point to a short squeeze setup.
Arkham identified a sharp and concentrated increase in futures open interest, primarily on OKX and Bybit. The rise in leveraged long positions appeared aggressive and unusually synchronized.
At the same time, the firm observed steady accumulation of spot JELLY tokens across centralized exchanges including MEXC, KuCoin, and Bitget.
The divergence between futures growth and slower spot absorption is critical. When open interest expands faster than actual token buying, it often indicates traders are using high leverage to influence price direction with limited real capital backing the move.
Arkham described the setup as resembling a classic coordinated speculative play.
First, gradual spot buying can thin available supply, making the token more sensitive to price pressure. With liquidity constrained, even modest futures-driven price pushes can create exaggerated upward movements.
Second, heavy leveraged long positioning can force volatility. If price rises quickly, short sellers may be liquidated, triggering forced buying that accelerates the move further, the typical mechanics of a short squeeze.
In such structures, price momentum becomes self-reinforcing until the initiating group begins exiting positions. When support fades, the reversal can be just as aggressive as the pump phase.
JELLYJELLY, the native token of Jellyverse built on the Sei Network, remains a small-cap asset, typically under a $50 million market capitalization.
Small-cap tokens are structurally more exposed to liquidity shocks and leverage-driven price swings. A relatively thin order book means concentrated futures activity can disproportionately impact price.
Arkham also pointed traders toward funding rates on OKX and Bybit as a key signal. Extremely elevated positive funding would indicate that long-position holders are paying a premium to maintain exposure, often a late-stage sign of overheated leverage.
The activity cluster breaks down as follows:
Arkham emphasized that these cycles tend to end abruptly once the organizing participants withdraw liquidity or reduce futures exposure.
For retail traders, the main risk is entering during the “artificial heat” phase, when price action appears explosive but is largely driven by leverage rather than organic demand.
The post Crypto Project Flagged After Suspicious Futures Surge Raises Manipulation Concerns appeared first on ETHNews.


