Hyperliquid sees Machi Big Brother liquidated seven times in 10 hours

A prominent Ethereum long position on Hyperliquid faced repeated liquidations on June 23. The event has drawn attention to public tracking of whale activity on the platform.

Lookonchain reported that the account linked to Machi Big Brother was liquidated seven times over a 10-hour period on June 23 while maintaining long positions in ETH.

Hyperliquid's transparent address-level data and liquidation maps allowed traders to monitor the vulnerable price zones in real time. This visibility turned the position into a shared reference point for market participants.

At the time, ETH traded at $1,607, down 3 percent over 24 hours. Open interest in ETH derivatives stood near $22.7 billion with futures liquidations totaling about $213 million.

The episode illustrates how public leverage data on Hyperliquid can influence short-term trading behavior without guaranteeing price direction.

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Illustration of Hyperliquid token price at $50 driven by HYPE ETF inflows, featuring financial charts and investment flows.
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Hyperliquid price crosses $50 as HYPE ETFs attract inflows

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Hyperliquid's token price crossed $50 this week, driven by early inflows into new spot HYPE exchange-traded funds that outpaced Bitcoin products on an adjusted basis.

Britain’s financial regulator has placed Hyperliquid and the Hyper Foundation on its warning list, citing possible unauthorized financial services in the UK.

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Hyperliquid ETFs have drawn in 172 million dollars since their launch. This comes as the HYPE token reached an all-time high. Meanwhile, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen outflows of nearly 5.6 billion dollars over the same period.

Institutional investors pulled nearly $2.7 billion from spot Bitcoin and Ethereum exchange-traded funds over the past two weeks. The outflows coincided with inflows into newer single-asset funds tracking Hyperliquid’s HYPE token, XRP, and Solana.

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Jaredfromsubway.eth, a prominent Ethereum MEV bot, lost more than $7.5 million after approving attacker-controlled contracts that enabled an allowance drain. The incident occurred through a series of fake trading routes set up over several weeks. Security firm Blockaid identified the exploit as targeting the bot's automated approval logic rather than private keys or protocol flaws.

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