Hyperliquid whale James Wynn was fully liquidated three times in a single week after repeatedly shorting Bitcoin with 40x leverage, losing his entire margin on each position. The trades, tracked by on-chain monitoring service Lookonchain, have become one of the most visible cautionary tales of over-leveraged trading in 2026.
Between approximately March 21 and March 26, Wynn opened three separate short positions against Bitcoin on Hyperliquid, the decentralized perpetuals exchange. Each position carried 40x leverage. Each ended in complete liquidation, not a partial stop-out, but a total wipeout of deposited margin.
Key Stat
3×
Fully liquidated in one week
James Wynn opened and lost three separate 40x leveraged Bitcoin short positions within seven days, each ending in a complete wipeout.
The positions varied in size. One documented trade involved roughly $3,911 USDC in deposited margin, used to short 2.69 BTC at 40x leverage, creating approximately $190,000 in notional exposure. That position was liquidated with a loss of around $3,430. A second documented position shorted 1.31 BTC (roughly $93,000 notional) at the same 40x leverage, with a liquidation price of $71,936.
A third liquidation reportedly resulted in a loss exceeding $100,000, according to PANews, citing Lookonchain data. The discrepancy in loss figures across the three events reflects different position sizes rather than conflicting reports.
Leverage Used
40x
Per short position
At 40x leverage, a 2.5% adverse move against the position is sufficient to trigger full liquidation, leaving zero margin remaining.
After each liquidation, Wynn reloaded immediately and reopened the same short thesis. The pattern, three identical setups producing three identical failures, distinguishes this from a single bad trade. It signals a conviction-driven approach that ignored the market’s repeated rejection of his bearish bet.
Wynn is not an anonymous retail trader. He is one of Hyperliquid’s most prominent public participants, known for ultra-high-leverage positions that regularly attract attention and, in some cases, copycats. His trading history on the platform has been extensively documented by on-chain analysts.
In May 2025, Wynn held one of crypto’s largest publicly visible leveraged positions: a $1.25 billion long Bitcoin bet at 40x on Hyperliquid. At his peak, his account value reached nearly $100 million. That figure has since been almost entirely erased.
Wynn’s cumulative losses since May 2025 now total approximately $98.5 million. On a single day during that stretch, he was liquidated 12 times. His worst weekend drawdown reached $80 million. This week’s three short liquidations are the latest chapter in a pattern that crypto community members have described as “gambling with a timer.”
Wynn has not publicly commented on the latest round of losses. No statement has appeared on X or any other platform. Whether copy-traders mirrored his short positions this week and suffered similar liquidations remains unconfirmed, though his visibility on the Hyperliquid leaderboard makes follower exposure a persistent risk, similar to how high-profile investment decisions from figures like Cathie Wood can influence retail behavior.
The structural problem with Wynn’s trades was straightforward. At 40x leverage, even a 2.5% price increase against a short position is enough to trigger full liquidation. Bitcoin did not need to rally dramatically to wipe each position; it just needed to not fall.
Bitcoin traded at approximately $69,527 at press time, down 2.58% over the past 24 hours. The Fear & Greed Index sat at 10, deep in “Extreme Fear” territory. Yet despite that fearful backdrop, BTC held above levels that would have kept Wynn’s shorts alive, repeatedly bouncing enough to force liquidation before any sustained move lower materialized.
This dynamic, where a well-capitalized, high-conviction bear gets liquidated three times in a row, suggests that Bitcoin’s price floor during this period was more resilient than the broader sentiment readings indicated. Shorts were being punished even in a fearful market. For traders tracking broader crypto market developments, the pattern underscores how 40x leverage compresses the margin for error to nearly zero.
The math is unforgiving. A 40x leveraged short requires Bitcoin to move down almost immediately after entry. Any consolidation or minor bounce, even within a broader downtrend, can be terminal. Wynn’s three failed shorts did not require a bull market to be destroyed. They required only the absence of an immediate, sustained selloff.
As developments in AI-powered analytics make on-chain trading data more accessible to retail participants, cases like Wynn’s serve as a real-time lesson in how leverage asymmetry works. The trades are public, the outcomes are verifiable, and the conclusion is difficult to argue with: three identical bets, three identical results.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.


