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Crypto Futures Liquidations Hit $80M as HYPE Shorts Squeezed

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More than $80 million in crypto futures liquidations hit leveraged traders in a single 24-hour stretch, and the damage split in a way that says more about where derivatives trading is heading than about where prices are going. Bitcoin and Ethereum longs absorbed the worst of it. Hyperliquid’s HYPE token went the other direction entirely, torching the traders who bet against it.

Strip out the headline figure and one detail jumps out. A token native to a decentralized exchange generated nearly as much carnage as Bitcoin did, and it did so by squeezing shorts rather than flushing longs.

BTC and ETH Longs Bled While HYPE Shorts Burned

The tally came to roughly $80.24 million across just three tokens, and the imbalance ran in opposite directions at the same time. Bitcoin (BTC) perpetual futures, the no-expiry derivative contracts that dominate crypto leverage, recorded about $26.91 million in liquidations, with 75.44% of that coming from long positions. Ethereum (ETH) was worse, posting $32.55 million, of which 67.72% were longs.

Token 24h Liquidations Dominant Side Share of That Side
Bitcoin $26.91M Long 75.44%
Ethereum $32.55M Long 67.72%
HYPE $20.78M Short 90.13%

So far, ordinary stuff. Bullish positioning got crowded, the market dipped, and the leverage cleared out the optimists. You can watch that pattern repeat almost weekly on the live Bitcoin liquidation data. The HYPE column is the one that breaks the script.

Why a Short Squeeze Cuts Deeper Than a Long Flush

HYPE logged $20.78 million in liquidations, and 90.13% of those were shorts. That is not a wobble in sentiment. That is a one-sided bet getting run over. Traders piled in against the token, the price climbed instead of falling, and their positions were force-closed at a loss.

A short squeeze is more violent than a long flush because of how it feeds itself. When shorts get liquidated, the exchange closes the position by buying the token back. That buying pushes the price higher, which liquidates the next layer of shorts, which forces more buying. It is a staircase that builds its own momentum.

  • $69.97 was HYPE’s all-time high, set on May 31, 2026, one day before the liquidation snapshot.
  • 90.13% of the token’s liquidations came from short positions.
  • $18.7 million in short bets were force-closed, fuel for the upward spiral.

The timing matters. HYPE was pressing a record high when the squeeze hit, which means the shorts were fighting a token in price discovery, the worst place to be on the wrong side of leverage. Compare that with Bitcoin, which has been unusually calm; the broader market backdrop included Bitcoin volatility sitting at a nine-month low as options activity dried up. Quiet majors, a wild DEX-native token. That contrast is the whole story.

Hyperliquid Quietly Became the House

Here is the part the liquidation headline buries. HYPE is the token of Hyperliquid, a decentralized exchange (DEX, a venue where trades settle on-chain rather than through a company’s internal books). And over the past year that venue stopped being a niche.

From Niche Venue to Volume Leader

By the spring, Hyperliquid was processing around $172.63 billion in 30-day perpetual volume, according to Hyperliquid platform statistics compiled by data trackers. Across decentralized venues it commands more than 70% of on-chain perpetual futures volume, with roughly $9 billion in open interest (OI, the total value of contracts still live). Those are not DEX numbers. Those are numbers that used to belong only to the big centralized desks.

  • About $172.63 billion in 30-day perpetual trading volume.
  • Over 70% share of on-chain perp DEX volume.
  • Roughly $9 billion in open interest across the exchange.
  • Weekly volume frequently running in the tens of billions.

What HIP-3 Unlocked

The accelerant was HIP-3, a market framework the exchange rolled out in October 2025 that lets the community spin up permissionless markets, including for real-world assets (RWA, things like equities and commodities tracked on-chain). Open interest in those RWA perpetuals hit a record $2.65 billion by late May, roughly doubling in two months.

Put it together and the squeeze reads differently. A token tied to that infrastructure producing centralized-scale liquidations is not a fluke. It is what happens when the leverage migrates and brings its volatility with it.

The On-Chain Order Book Is Eating the Exchange Model

The structural gap between the two venue types is what makes this rotation hard to reverse. On a centralized exchange, you hand your money to the company and trust its internal matching engine. On a Hyperliquid-style platform, the order book and the liquidations happen in the open.

Attribute Centralized Exchange Hyperliquid-Style Perp DEX
Custody Exchange holds your funds Self-custody, on-chain
Order matching Off-chain, internal On-chain order book
New markets Listing team decides Permissionless via HIP-3
Liquidation data Opaque internal records Public, verifiable on-chain

That last row is doing quiet work. When liquidations are public, the rest of the market can see exactly where leverage is stacked and where it just got cleared. The squeeze that hammered HYPE shorts played out on a tape anyone could read in real time, which is part of why these moves can cascade so fast.

The Leverage Trap Behind a Crowded Trade

For the trader, the lesson is older than crypto. Both the Bitcoin longs and the HYPE shorts made the same mistake from opposite ends. They joined a crowded, one-directional trade and used borrowed money to do it.

Funding rates are the tell. In perpetual futures, longs and shorts pay each other a periodic fee to keep the contract price near spot, and a lopsided rate flags an overcrowded book, as the guide to perpetual futures funding rates lays out. When 90% of one token’s positions sit on a single side, the squeeze is not a surprise. It is a setup waiting for a spark.

The macro mood did not help the bulls. Bitcoin spent the period under pressure, with institutional money still leaking out; BlackRock clients pulling $177 million from the IBIT fund was one sign of the softer bid that left leveraged longs exposed.

If the next round of crypto futures liquidations lands on Hyperliquid’s order book rather than a centralized desk, the incumbents lose more than fee revenue. They lose the tape that tells the market what leverage is doing. And if the squeeze unwinds and HYPE hands back its record highs, the migration story still holds, only with longs as the casualties next time.

Frequently Asked Questions

What triggered the $80 million in crypto futures liquidations?

A sharp 24-hour move caught leveraged traders on the wrong side. Bitcoin and Ethereum dipped, wiping out crowded long positions worth a combined $40-plus million, while HYPE rallied toward a record high and forced bearish short positions to close, adding $20.78 million more.

What is a short squeeze and why does it push prices up?

A short squeeze happens when traders betting on a falling price are forced to buy the asset back to close their positions. That buying lifts the price, which liquidates more shorts, which triggers more buying. The loop can accelerate a rally quickly, as it did with HYPE near $69.97.

Is Hyperliquid bigger than centralized exchanges for futures?

Not overall, but it now dominates the on-chain side, holding more than 70% of decentralized perpetual volume and around $9 billion in open interest. Its roughly $172.63 billion in 30-day volume puts it in the same conversation as major centralized derivatives venues.

How can traders avoid getting liquidated?

Lower leverage, wider stop distances, and smaller position sizes reduce the odds of a forced close. Watching funding rates helps too: an extreme reading signals that positioning is crowded on one side, which is exactly when squeezes and flushes tend to strike.

What does the long versus short liquidation split tell you?

It shows which way the crowd was leaning before the move. A liquidation total dominated by longs, like Bitcoin’s 75.44%, means bullish bets got punished. A short-heavy figure, like HYPE’s 90.13%, means bearish bets were overrun and likely fed the rally that liquidated them.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and is not financial advice. Leveraged crypto derivatives carry a high risk of rapid and total loss. Consult a qualified financial professional before trading. All figures are accurate as of publication.

Logan Pierce is a writer and web publisher with over seven years of experience covering consumer technology. He has published work on independent tech blogs and freelance bylines covering Android devices, privacy focused software, and budget gadgets. Logan founded Oton Technology to publish clear, no nonsense tech news and reviews based on real hands on testing. He has personally tested and reviewed dozens of mid range and budget Android phones, written extensively about app privacy, and built and managed multiple WordPress publications over the past decade. Logan holds a bachelor's degree in English and studied digital marketing at a certificate level.

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