Background

Whale Opens 20x Oil Short on Hyperliquid With $5.6M USDC at Risk

Pizza
Article arrow_drop_down
Crypto whale oil short position on Hyperliquid with 20x leverage and declining chart

A crypto whale just deposited 5.6 million USDC into Hyperliquid and bet that oil prices will drop, using 20x leverage. If oil rises instead, they stand to lose it all, with a liquidation price of $147.94 per barrel.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • A whale deposited $5.6 million in USDC on Hyperliquid to open a 20x leveraged short on crude oil, betting prices will fall.
  • Just days ago, another whale lost $1.55 million when oil prices surged 30% due to the Iran-Israel conflict, wiping out $36.9 million in oil shorts on Hyperliquid.
  • Hyperliquid is a crypto trading platform where users can now bet on oil, stocks, and other real-world assets, not just Bitcoin and Ethereum.

What Does “Shorting Oil With 20x Leverage” Actually Mean?

Let’s break this down in simple terms. “Shorting” means betting that a price will go down. If you short oil and the price drops, you make money. If the price goes up, you lose money.

“20x leverage” means the trader is borrowing to make a much bigger bet than their actual deposit. With $5.6 million deposited, this whale controls roughly $8.55 million worth of oil contracts. That amplifies both profits and losses by 20 times.

The data comes from LookIntoChain, a blockchain analytics platform that tracks large wallet movements. The whale’s liquidation price sits at $147.94 per barrel, meaning if oil hits that level, the entire $5.6 million deposit is wiped out.

Why Are Crypto Traders Betting on Oil Prices?

This trade happened on Hyperliquid, a decentralized trading platform (think of it as a crypto exchange with no central company running it). Hyperliquid originally focused on crypto trading, but it now lets users trade contracts tied to oil, stocks, and other traditional assets.

The platform hit $1.2 billion in open positions on March 10, with the oil contract (called CL-USDC) alone generating $1.62 billion in daily trading volume. That is more oil trading volume than Coinbase sees in the same timeframe.

A big reason traders flock here is timing. Traditional oil markets close on weekends. Hyperliquid runs 24/7. When geopolitical events shake oil prices over a weekend, crypto traders can react immediately while Wall Street sleeps.

What Happened to the Last Whale Who Shorted Oil?

This new $5.6 million short is especially risky given what happened just three days ago. On March 9, oil prices surged roughly 30% in a single day after a dramatic escalation in the Iran-Israel conflict.

The spike was triggered by Iran expanding missile and drone strikes to Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, Iraq’s oil output dropping about 60%, and tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz collapsing. Oil on Hyperliquid jumped to $114 per barrel.

That surge wiped out nearly $40 million in Hyperliquid oil positions, with $36.9 million of those losses coming from short sellers, traders who bet prices would fall.

One specific whale, tracked by Lookonchain as wallet 0x8Af7, had a $7.8 million oil short fully liquidated, losing over $1.55 million. Remarkably, that same whale immediately opened a new $6.48 million short on oil.

Source: @lookonchain on X

Where Does the Broader Crypto Market Stand Right Now?

The broader crypto market is deep in fear territory. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index sits at 18 out of 100, labeled “Extreme Fear.” That is the kind of reading you see when most investors are nervous and selling rather than buying.

Crypto Fear and Greed Index showing Extreme Fear score of 18 out of 100 on March 12, 2026
Crypto Fear & Greed Index showing Extreme Fear. Source: Alternative.me

Hyperliquid’s own token, HYPE, trades at $37.29, up about 3% in the past 24 hours. The platform has an $8.89 billion market cap and launched in October 2025. Only 7 of its top 30 markets are crypto pairs; the rest are commodities and stocks, according to a recent analysis by Arca.

What Should Regular Crypto Holders Know?

If you hold Bitcoin or other crypto on a regular exchange like Coinbase or Binance, this whale’s oil bet does not directly affect your holdings. These leveraged trades happen on a separate platform and involve a specific type of high-risk contract.

However, this story matters for two reasons. First, it shows how crypto platforms are expanding far beyond Bitcoin and Ethereum. You can now trade oil, the S&P 500, gold, and silver using stablecoins, all without a traditional brokerage account.

Second, the massive liquidations from last week are a reminder of how risky leveraged trading can be. A 30% move in oil erased nearly $40 million from traders on Hyperliquid in a single day. For regular holders, the practical takeaway is straightforward: leveraged trading on platforms like Hyperliquid is not for beginners, and the losses can be total.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency and leveraged trading involve substantial risk of loss. Always do your own research before making any investment decisions.

About the author

About the author

Pizza

Pizza is a crypto market editor at CoinLineup covering altcoin markets, NFTs, and emerging blockchain ecosystems. Focused on identifying market trends and providing balanced analysis of new cryptocurrency projects and token economies.

More posts

Related

Index