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Whale takes $1.1bn, 40x‑leveraged bitcoin long on Hyperliquid

Whale takes $1.1bn, 40x‑leveraged bitcoin long on Hyperliquid

Trader James Wynn opened a long position in perpetual contracts for 10,200 BTC ($1.14bn) using 40x leverage on Hyperliquid.

At press time, he still held the equivalent of 5,188 BTC ($574.3m) with an unrealised profit of $13.62m.

Data: Hyperliquid.

The average entry price is $108,065; the liquidation level is $95,941.

Partial profit-taking on the long has already brought the trader $11.23m.

Wynn separately noted difficulties transferring USDC from Binance to an external wallet on Arbitrum to support the open position. He doubted it was mere coincidence.

The Hyperliquid platform is built on its own high-performance L1 HyperEVM and offers functionality common to CEX: a real-time order book, high liquidity and competitive fees. Hyperliquid does not require KYC procedures.

The network uses a modified version of the Proof-of-Stake consensus algorithm called HyperBFT, with throughput of 200,000 TPS.

Thanks to its speed and capital efficiency, it has quickly gained popularity. A position as large as $1.1bn may reflect a shift by big players away from centralised venues towards DEXs.

At press time, Hyperliquid’s open interest (OI) and 24-hour turnover hit record highs of $8.92bn and $18.91bn, respectively. By both metrics, the platform ranks fifth.

According to The Block, DEX spot trading as a share of the corresponding CEX metric has risen to 20%.

Data: The Block.

Bitcoin and Ethereum are the leading assets on Hyperliquid. For bitcoin, OI and daily trading volume are $3.87bn and $11.36bn, respectively; for the second-largest cryptocurrency they are $1.05bn and $3.89bn.

In March, ForkLog examined the chain of events in which high-risk positions jeopardised not only the platform’s stability but also the safety of client funds in the Hyperliquidity Provider Vault.

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