A crypto whale who allegedly manipulated the prize of the Jelly my Jelly (JELLY) memecoin on decentralized exchange Hyperliquid still holds nearly $2 million worth of the token, according to blockchain analysts.
The unidentified whale made at least $6.26 million in profit by exploiting the liquidation parameters on Hyperliquid.
According to a postmortem report by blockchain intelligence firm Arkham, the whale opened three large trading positions within five minutes: two long positions worth $2.15 million and $1.9 million, and a $4.1 million short position that effectively offset the longs.
Source: Arkham
When the price of JELLY rose by 400%, the $4 million short position wasnât immediately liquidated due to its size. Instead, it was absorbed into the Hyperliquidity Provider Vault (HLP), which is designed to liquidate large positions.
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In more troubling revelations, the entity may still be holding nearly $2 million worth of the tokenâs supply, according to blockchain investigator ZachXBT.
âFive addresses linked to the entity who manipulated JELLY on Hyperliquid still hold ~10% of the JELLY supply on Solana ($1.9M+). All JELLY was purchased since March 22, 2025,â he wrote in a March 26 Telegram post.
The entity continues selling the tokens despite Hyperliquid freezing and delisting the memecoin, citing âevidence of suspicious market activityâ involving trading instruments.
The JELLY tokenâs collapse is the latest in a series of memecoin scandals and insider schemes looking to capitalize on investor hype.Â
Source: Bubblemaps
The exploit occurred only two weeks after a Wolf of Wall Street-inspired memecoin â launched by the Official Melania Meme (MELANIA) and Libra (LIBRA) token co-creator Hayden Davis â crashed over 99% after launching with an 80% insider supply.
WOLF/SOL, market cap, 1-hour chart. Source:Â Dexscreener
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Lessons from the JELLY memecoin meltdown: âHype without fundamentalsâ
âThe JELLY incident is a clear reminder that hype without fundamentals doesnât last,â according to Alvin Kan, chief operating officer at Bitget Wallet.
âIn DeFi, momentum can drive short-term attention, but it doesnât build sustainable platforms,â Kan told Cointelegraph, adding:
âProjects built on speculation, not utility, will continue to get exposed â especially in a market where capital moves quickly and unforgivingly.â
While Hyperliquidâs response cushioned short-term damage, it raises further questions about decentralization, as similar interventions âblur the line between decentralized ethos and centralized control.â
The Hyper Foundation, Hyperliquidâs ecosystem nonprofit, will âautomaticallyâ reimburse most affected users for losses related to the incident, except the addresses belonging to the exploiter.
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