Trader spots unusual market activity on New Year’s Eve
Vida, a Chinese trader and founder of Equation News, shared details about what happened on December 31. He noticed something strange was happening with the BROCCOLI714 token. The price jumped over 30% in just an hour, which is not normal behavior for most assets.
At this point, Vida had opened arbitrage positions – essentially betting that prices would converge between different markets. These positions were worth approximately $500,000 each. When he noticed the sudden price movement, he decided to shut everything down immediately. This quick decision earned him $300,000 in profit right off the bat.
Identify the handling model
What next caught Vida’s attention was even more unusual. It saw a massive $5 million buy order on the Binance spot market for BROCCOLI714. But here’s the problem: The futures market only had about $50,000 worth of buy orders at the same price level. That’s a huge gap.
From a broader perspective, BROCCOLI714 had a market cap of around $40 million in its primary order book, with total buy orders of $26 million. To Vida, this pattern suggested something was wrong. Either someone’s account was compromised or there was a serious error in the market maker’s software executing the trades.
The trading strategy unfolds
Vida suspected what was happening. He believed that someone was using these $26 million in spot buy orders to artificially inflate the spot price. The goal, he believed, was to drive up the prices of futures contracts and then exit those positions at a profit. As long as the hacker kept these buy orders active, the price would likely continue to rise.
So Vida started buying BROCCOLI714 USDT perpetual futures contracts. He placed orders every 5 to 10 seconds through his trading terminal. The fact that these orders were executed told him something important: the circuit breaker protection period for the contract had expired. This meant that the risks of liquidation were present again.
He added a long position of around $200,000 at an average cost of $0.046 per token.
Go out at the right time
Then came the signal Vida had been waiting for. The hacker began to partially disable the order book. For Vida, this meant risk control units were springing into action. He didn’t hesitate: he started selling all his long positions in the spot and futures markets, without worrying too much about getting the perfect price.
He added another $200,000 to his initial position, bringing his total cash to $1.5 million. Later, when the hacker completely emptied the order book, Vida opened a $400,000 short position at around $0.065. He closed this position when the price fell to around $0.02.
A word of warning
It is worth mentioning that this type of trading carries enormous risks. The cryptocurrency market is quite volatile on its own, but when you add leverage, the chances of losing everything – including your initial investment – ​​increase significantly.
What Vida described shows how quickly things can change in these markets. One minute you’re seeing normal trading patterns, the next you’re dealing with what looks like market manipulation. His ability to recognize the pattern and act quickly made the difference between profit and potential loss.
I think stories like this show why people need to be careful. Not everyone has the experience or tools to spot these situations, and even if they do, timing is everything. If you get it wrong by a few seconds, the result could be completely different.
The BROCCOLI714 incident also reminds us that crypto markets can behave in unexpected ways. Whether technical errors, compromised accounts, or deliberate manipulation, traders must remain vigilant. But perhaps more importantly, they need to understand the risks they are taking, particularly when using leverage.
![]()


