WTI crude oil fell below $69 on July 1, triggering two large forced liquidations of the biggest WTIOIL long-position whale on Hyperliquid, identified as 0x007d, within about one hour. According to BlockBeats On-chain Detection, monitoring by Hyperinsight showed the combined liquidation totaled 180,000 contracts at an average forced-liquidation price of about $68.35, with losses of about $3.46 million.
The whale had held a 20x leveraged WTIOIL long position with an entry price of about $87.59 and an estimated liquidation price near $68.56. The first partial liquidation involved 36,000 CL, with losses of about $690,000, followed by a full liquidation of 144,000 CL, with losses of about $2.77 million. Based on an estimate using initial margin, the position’s final loss exceeded principal by about 410%.
The liquidation threshold was set around oil prices seen before the U.S.-Iran conflict. Using contract pricing, the conflict began with an initial round of airstrikes on February 28, when oil was about $68.5. Prices later surged to around $118 amid geopolitical risk, representing a rise of about 72% over that range. The whale did not close the position near the peak, and as crude continued to retreat, the position was liquidated by the system near $68.35, effectively giving back the gains since February 28. WTI was last reported at about $68.8.
On-chain data indicated that large WTI oil position holders were overall notably skewed bearish. Million-dollar-scale short positions had a notional size of about $61.46 million, about 2.32 times the roughly $26.46 million in long positions. The average entry price for longs was about $84.27, leaving the broader long positioning deeply underwater.