
The post Crypto Trader Uses Liquidations to Drain $4M from Hyperliquid (HLP) appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
In crypto trading, liquidity can be both a strength and a weakness. And sometimes, the line between strategy and exploitation gets blurry. A recent trade on Hyperliquid’s HLP vault led to a staggering $4 million loss – not because of a hack or a bug, but because a trader played the system to perfection.
With a clever move, they turned $10 million USDC into a $271 million Ethereum long position, walked away with $1.8 million in profit, and left HLP to absorb the damage. It’s the biggest single-day loss for the vault since its launch in May 2023. Now, analysts like Three Sigma are questioning whether liquidation-based protocols are leaving themselves wide open to traders who know exactly how to work the mechanics in their favor.
How HLP Works and Why It Took the Hit
HLP is Hyperliquid’s liquidity pool, where users deposit funds to earn passive income from market-making and liquidations. It generally profits when traders lose, but automated strategies can sometimes be used against it. This is exactly what happened when a trader withdrew collateral in a way that forced HLP to take over a bad trade, leading to a $4 million loss.
How the Trader Pulled It Off
Exiting a massive position without crashing the market is tricky. Instead of selling Ethereum directly into the order book, the trader found another way. They withdrew their collateral, which reduced their margin and triggered a forced liquidation. As a result, HLP was left holding a $286 million Ethereum long position.
The Hidden Strategy
The trader knew that HLP’s forced selling would push ETH prices lower. To take advantage of this, they likely hedged by shorting ETH on another exchange, possibly Binance. As ETH’s price dropped, they made a profit while HLP absorbed the losses.
Analyst View: Was This an Exploit?
Hyperliquid argues that this wasn’t a traditional exploit. Unlike GLP, which is forced to take the other side of trades, Hyperliquid’s system allows market makers to step in. Even though HLP lost $4 million, it wasn’t a critical failure. The loss was attributed to execution slippage, meaning the liquidator couldn’t perfectly match entry and exit prices.
This isn’t the first time traders have tested HLP’s system. In 2023, an attacker manipulated SNX prices on centralized exchanges and exploited the vault for $37,000. Since then, Hyperliquid has adjusted its pricing models to prevent similar attacks.
Will This Happen Again? Hyperliquid Responds
Following this latest loss, Hyperliquid quickly made changes to reduce risk, including:
- Lowering max leverage to 40x for Bitcoin and 25x for Ethereum
- Increasing margin requirements for large positions
More risk control updates are expected in the future.
After the incident, Hyperliquid’s HYPE token briefly dropped 12% but later recovered. Despite the setback, HLP remains profitable, having generated $60 million for investors since its launch.
Risk and reward are two sides of the same coin, and for now, HLP seems determined to stay in the game.
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