Scan to Download Gate App
qrCode
More Download Options
Don't remind me again today

POPCAT Flash Crash on Hyperliquid Sparks $4.9 Million Manipulation Allegations

  • Trader used 19 wallets and a fake $20M POPCAT buy wall, triggering massive liquidations.
  • Hyperliquid’s liquidity provider absorbed a $4.9 million loss as the market collapsed.
  • Analysts suspect a deliberate stress test exposing fragility in high-leverage DeFi markets.

An anonymous trader burned through $3 million in minutes on Hyperliquid after faking a $20 million buy wall on POPCAT.

The move triggered a cascade of liquidations, resulting in a $4.9 million loss for the platform’s liquidity provider. Analysts now suspect a coordinated “stress test” of Hyperliquid’s system.

$30 Million Long Positions Create Chaos {#h-30-million-long-positions-create-chaos}

The incident began when an unknown trader withdrew $3 million USDC from the OKX exchange, splitting it across 19 separate wallets before depositing it into Hyperliquid DEX.

Using these accounts, the trader opened massive long positions on POPCAT, leveraging them approximately 5x. Total exposure reached around $26–30 million, briefly making POPCAT one of the most actively traded tokens on the platform.

According to blockchain intelligence firm Arkham, the trader’s positions were quickly liquidated, resulting in the loss of almost all collateral.

“Someone just passed $5 million of bad debt on POPCAT to Hyperliquid’s Hyperliquidity Provider (HLP)…These 19 accounts were liquidated for a combined $25.5 million of POPCAT, losing $2.98 million in collateral,” Arkham reported.

The on-chain tracker also revealed that HLP lost $4.95 million, a move that effectively closed out remaining positions.

The remaining long positions were passed to the Hyperliquidity Provider (HLP) to liquidate.

HLP appears to have lost $4.95M closing out the positions. pic.twitter.com/Qfq9jcy4Mz — Arkham (@arkham) November 12, 2025

Fake Buy Wall Sparks Mass Liquidations {#h-fake-buy-wall-sparks-mass-liquidations}

To amplify the chaos, the trader placed a $20 million buy wall at $0.21, creating the illusion of strong demand. As of this writing, the POPCAT price was trading for $0.12, down by almost 30% in the last 24 hours.

This strategic move attracted other traders to enter long positions, as they believed in a bullish momentum. Within minutes, the buy wall vanished, causing POPCAT’s price to collapse. POPCAT Price Performance POPCAT Price Performance. Source: CoinGecko

The sudden drop triggered mass liquidations across the market, with HLP absorbing the brunt of the losses.

“The attacker then placed an approximately $20 million buy wall near $0.21, creating the illusion of strong demand — only to cancel the orders, triggering a liquidity collapse that led to mass liquidations. HLP absorbed the positions and lost around $4.9M, while the attacker’s entire $3M stake was wiped out,” blockchain analyst Lookonchain noted.

Stress Test or Deliberate Attack? {#h-stress-test-or-deliberate-attack}

Many in the crypto community suspect this was no accident. Vikas Singh, who observed the event live, compared it to previous manipulative scenarios, such as JellyJelly 2.0, noting the unusual stability of the long wall and its manual maintenance.

Did a JELLYJELLY 2.0 even happen yesterday with POPCAT?

My analysis of yesterday Hyperliquid – Popcat orderbook: A 30-min shorts game.$POPCAT orderbook was crazy yesterday for a perp product. Why? because their was a long position which was having a sticky bid of $11M+ when… pic.twitter.com/aoUG6NJVqv — Vikas Singh (vikas.lens) 🌿, in Dubai 🇦🇪 (@HeyVixon) November 13, 2025

Analysts speculate this could have been a targeted stress test to probe Hyperliquid’s automated liquidity systems.

Some community members even speculated about Binance’s former CEO CZ’s involvement. However, CZ responded directly, denying any connection.

“I have not used any other CEX for 8 years,” the Binance executive articulated.

This marks the third major market incident on Hyperliquid this year, raising questions about how the exchange handles liquidity concentration and systemic risk. High-leverage meme tokens, such as POPCAT, are inherently risky and could expose vulnerabilities in decentralized liquidity systems.

Reportedly, the incident also sparked a temporary pause on Hyperliquid’s Arbitrum bridge, though deposits and withdrawals continued unaffected.

DeFi analyst Hanzo suggests exchanges may need stricter leverage limits, real-time monitoring tools, or platform-specific restrictions to mitigate similar attacks in the future.

$30M manipulation on Hyperliquid 🚨

Roughly 13 hours before the event, an unknown trader withdrew $3M $USDC from OKX and split the funds across 19 wallets on Hyperliquid.

Then he started opening massive long positions on $POPCAT, pushing the total exposure to around $20–30M… pic.twitter.com/FxnX7ap7Q8 — Hanzo ㊗️ (@DeFi_Hanzo) November 12, 2025

While Hyperliquid’s team manually stabilized the market, the incident exposes the fragility of automated liquidity mechanisms in high-leverage meme markets.

POPCAT2.9%
ON-2.2%
HYPE0.76%
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
0/400
No comments
Trade Crypto Anywhere Anytime
qrCode
Scan to download Gate App
Community
English
  • 简体中文
  • English
  • Tiếng Việt
  • 繁體中文
  • Español
  • Русский
  • Français (Afrique)
  • Português (Portugal)
  • Bahasa Indonesia
  • 日本語
  • بالعربية
  • Українська
  • Português (Brasil)