Coinbase Might Be Manipulating Bitcoin’s Price — Here’s the Shocking Truth
Coinbase Might Be Manipulating Bitcoin’s Price — Here’s the Shocking Truth
Everyone’s focused on Bitcoin ETFs, halving cycles, and shrinking exchange balances. Meanwhile, Coinbase just made its most aggressive move in years — dropping $2.5 billion to buy Deribit, the most important crypto derivatives exchange you’ve never used.
This isn’t just a big acquisition. It’s a bet. A bet that leverage, not spot, is going to control the next phase of Bitcoin’s price.
It’s a move straight out of the Wall Street playbook: if you can’t own the asset, own the pricing mechanism.
Let’s break down why this changes everything for Bitcoin — and why it’s time to think very carefully about where price discovery is really happening.
1. Spot Markets Are Dying — By Design
Over the last two years, more than 900,000 BTC have been pulled from centralized exchanges. That’s not a temporary glitch; it’s a structural change. And it’s not just Binance or Kraken — Coinbase has seen a massive decline in BTC reserves too. The popular narrative is that this is bullish, because it leads to a “supply squeeze.” But if that were fully true, Bitcoin would already be sitting at $150K.
So what’s going on?
The short answer: price isn’t being set by real buying anymore. It’s being set by synthetic trades.
Here’s the landscape:
Spot volume is drying up.
Actual BTC is moving to cold storage and long-term custody.
But price is still set on platforms where most of the volume is fake, leveraged, or both.
Coinbase sees this shift for what it is. They know the next era of market dominance won’t come from who holds the most coins. It’ll come from who controls the flows, volatility, and options pricing.
They’re not resisting the change. They’re doubling down.
That’s why they’re buying Deribit.
2. Deribit Is More Than Just Options
If you’ve never used Deribit, that’s by design. It’s not built for beginners. It’s where institutions, quants, and funds go to structure complex exposure to BTC and ETH. It’s not sexy, but it’s powerful.
Some fast facts:
Deribit accounts for 90%+ of crypto options volume
Handles over $1 trillion in annual notional trading
It's where implied volatility is discovered, not on spot markets
Most retail traders don’t realize it, but Deribit moves the market more than Coinbase ever has.
Why? Because this is where the biggest players hedge their exposure, bet on volatility, and shape market expectations weeks or months out.
An ETF might attract capital. But Deribit shapes how that capital behaves.
Coinbase buying Deribit is like Nasdaq buying the VIX engine. It's about owning the thing that tells traders how risky the market feels — and profiting from every reaction.
3. A Page From the Gold Playbook
Let’s rewind.
In the 1970s, gold was a physical asset game. But once futures markets launched, everything changed. Suddenly, big banks could move the price of gold without ever touching a bar of it.
Sound familiar?
Bitcoin is going through the exact same transformation:
CME Bitcoin futures have overtaken spot in volume
Binance’s perps dominate daily movement
Deribit’s options set the tone for market cycles
Real BTC is still scarce. But synthetic BTC? That’s infinitely scalable.
And that’s what Coinbase just bought.
The gold model was simple: create a deep derivatives market, let it dominate price discovery, and use it to suppress or control real flows.
Coinbase is applying that to Bitcoin.
And unless more people start asking how price is actually set, this model will work.
4. Paper Bitcoin Is Taking Over
Let’s talk numbers.
According to analysts like Willy Woo, the amount of paper Bitcoin (claims to BTC through derivatives) now exceeds 600,000 more than the real BTC available on exchanges.
Let that sink in.
There are more open contracts, options, and perpetuals than actual coins backing them.
That opens the door to:
Rehypothecation: using the same BTC across multiple products
Wash trading between counterparties
Massive price swings that have nothing to do with supply/demand
In short, you can create the illusion of demand or panic without moving real Bitcoin.
The real asset is becoming a background actor. And synthetic versions are running the stage.
Coinbase didn’t just buy Deribit to “expand their product.” They bought it because whoever controls paper BTC, controls perception.
And perception is where the price is born.
5. Why This Is Dangerous, But Won’t Last Forever
Here’s where Bitcoin still has an edge over gold:
You can take it into your own hands. Self-custody changes everything. You don’t need a vault, a third party, or permission.
That’s why long-term, derivatives games can’t win. But short-term? They can absolutely distort everything.
If:
Institutions keep hedging with paper
Retail keeps chasing leverage
Cold storage coins don’t move
Then price discovery stays fake. And power stays with the players who own the platforms that mint exposure.
That’s Coinbase now.
And it’s not going away anytime soon.
6. What Smart Bitcoin Investors Should Actually Do
This isn’t just a philosophical issue. It matters for your wallet.
If you want to escape the paper trap, here’s what you need to focus on:
Withdraw everything from major exchanges unless you’re actively trading
Don’t confuse exposure with ownership — options, perps, and ETFs aren’t Bitcoin
Secure your keys with hardware wallets or multisig
Watch derivatives data closely — open interest, funding rates, and implied vol now tell you more than spot charts
Be skeptical of every pump and dump until you understand what side of the trade the paper flows were on
The more paper that enters the game, the less true price you get. But you can opt out. Bitcoin still gives you that choice.
Coinbase doesn’t want you to. But you still can.
7. Final Message: This Wasn’t an Acquisition. It Was a Smart Maneuver
Coinbase is watching its core business erode. ETFs, self-custody, sovereign buyers — they’re all pulling BTC away from exchanges.
So Coinbase did the only logical thing: they bought the engine that drives volume, volatility, and perceived demand.
This isn’t growth. It’s survival.
It’s not a pivot. It’s a play for power.
And it sends one clear message:
Coinbase no longer wants to be where Bitcoin is held. It wants to be where Bitcoin is priced.
If you don’t see the difference, you’re already behind.
That's what happens when big players enter the game. No more friendly peer to peer interactions it becomes cutthroat business and most everything turns into a derivative shadow of what it was meant to be.
I tell you what my friend, I think you may be on to something. Very interesting, indeed.