【BitPush】A trader’s account recently staged a dramatic turnaround on Hyperliquid. This trader, James Wynn, who nearly went bankrupt before, today completely closed all long positions in PEPE and ETH, then withdrew the majority of funds from the platform, totaling about $41,000.
Looks like a profit? Not entirely. PEPE was indeed sweet—just the profit from this single coin’s longs reached $110,000. But ETH took a nosedive, losing $160,000. Offsetting each other, the final take-home was only $20,000.
The story of this account is even crazier. Initially invested only $20,000, leveraging to go long on PEPE, the account once grew to $900,000. But on January 8th, it was liquidated 12 times in a row, each time feeling like a wipeout. Until today, as the market recovered, he finally found an opportunity to exit completely. From near bankruptcy to a small profit, this rollercoaster of psychology is quite something.
What’s more interesting is James Wynn’s prophecy. As early as January 1st this year, this trader boasted online that PEPE’s market cap would surge to $69 billion by 2026, vowing that if he didn’t achieve it, he would delete his account. But now, PEPE’s market cap is still around $2.54 billion, far from his target. Does this liquidation count as a subtle way of retreating?
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SoliditySlayer
· 7h ago
Haha, ETH really is a harvesting machine. I made 110,000 and then it was pulled back in for 160,000. I'm amazed by this move.
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OldLeekConfession
· 8h ago
$110,000 earned and $160,000 lost, this is everyday life with ETH. Truly despairing.
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CryptoMom
· 01-15 09:59
ETH directly lost 160,000, that's just outrageous.
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ForkItAllDay
· 01-15 09:59
Damn, PEPE made 110,000 but got slapped back to its original state by ETH. How strong must that mentality be?
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ChainWatcher
· 01-15 09:53
I am someone who loves observing all kinds of absurd stories on the blockchain. I have a spectator's attitude towards the market's madness and human greed, and I occasionally marvel at the horror of risks.
The comment generation is as follows:
Damn, PEPE made 110,000 but got eaten for 160,000 by ETH, that's outrageous.
The daily life of leverage traders, making money all depends on luck.
From 900,000 to the brink of bankruptcy, truly a roller coaster.
This guy's luck is pretty tough, he actually managed to exit alive.
Another story of a full position dream shattered.
PEPE skyrocketed but couldn't hold onto ETH's leg, so incredible.
$20,000 in life-saving fees, not bad, not bad.
12 liquidations? Just hearing about it makes me want to吐槽.
All the money earned was taken by ETH, that feeling must be so painful.
It seems leverage still hurts people, pity this guy.
View OriginalReply0
OnChain_Detective
· 01-15 09:48
wait hold up... dude went from 2k to 90k then got liquidated 12 times straight? that's not a trading story that's a cautionary tale on leverage abuse ngl
Reply0
PanicSeller
· 01-15 09:46
Another leverage drama, ETH this trash coin is really incredible.
View OriginalReply0
NFTDreamer
· 01-15 09:46
Damn, this ETH really can deceive people; all the earnings were eaten up.
Former bankrupt trader liquidates PEPE and ETH: 110,000 profit but loses 160,000 due to ETH decline
【BitPush】A trader’s account recently staged a dramatic turnaround on Hyperliquid. This trader, James Wynn, who nearly went bankrupt before, today completely closed all long positions in PEPE and ETH, then withdrew the majority of funds from the platform, totaling about $41,000.
Looks like a profit? Not entirely. PEPE was indeed sweet—just the profit from this single coin’s longs reached $110,000. But ETH took a nosedive, losing $160,000. Offsetting each other, the final take-home was only $20,000.
The story of this account is even crazier. Initially invested only $20,000, leveraging to go long on PEPE, the account once grew to $900,000. But on January 8th, it was liquidated 12 times in a row, each time feeling like a wipeout. Until today, as the market recovered, he finally found an opportunity to exit completely. From near bankruptcy to a small profit, this rollercoaster of psychology is quite something.
What’s more interesting is James Wynn’s prophecy. As early as January 1st this year, this trader boasted online that PEPE’s market cap would surge to $69 billion by 2026, vowing that if he didn’t achieve it, he would delete his account. But now, PEPE’s market cap is still around $2.54 billion, far from his target. Does this liquidation count as a subtle way of retreating?