How to Use HyperStats Live Activity
Learn how to use HyperStats Live Activity to filter opens, closes, reductions, and liquidations so the feed becomes a decision-making tool instead of raw noise.
HyperStats Live Activity is built to tell you when something worth checking just happened. The page becomes powerful when you use it as a trigger layer instead of a raw event stream.
Filter for the event type you care about, catch the trigger, and then move immediately into the wallet page or token terminal to decide whether the flow actually matters.
In This Guide
Open and increase events tell you where traders are building risk. Reduce and close events tell you where they are taking risk off or realizing an outcome. Liquidations tell you where leverage failed.
Start by narrowing the feed to the kind of event you actually care about. If you want directional interest, focus on opens and increases. If you want stress and failure, focus on reductions, closes, and liquidations.
Once an event looks important, open the wallet page to inspect the trader and open the token terminal to inspect the market. That tells you whether the move is isolated or part of a larger flow.
Use This Guide With
The guide explains the workflow. These are the exact HyperStats product pages where you verify the live signal, inspect the trader, or read the current market context.
What the main event types mean
Open and increase events tell you where traders are building risk. Reduce and close events tell you where they are taking risk off or realizing an outcome. Liquidations tell you where leverage failed.
Those are very different signals. Opens and adds tell you about intention, while closes and liquidations tell you about consequences.
How to filter the feed correctly
Start by narrowing the feed to the kind of event you actually care about. If you want directional interest, focus on opens and increases. If you want stress and failure, focus on reductions, closes, and liquidations.
The margin and realized PnL filters are there to remove low-value events. A filtered feed is much more useful than trying to react to every small adjustment.
What to do after the trigger
Once an event looks important, open the wallet page to inspect the trader and open the token terminal to inspect the market. That tells you whether the move is isolated or part of a larger flow.
Live Activity is strongest when it sits between discovery and verification, not when it tries to be the only page you use.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I treat Live Activity as a complete event log?
No. It is better used as a filtered trigger surface that helps you move quickly into the wallet and token pages that provide full context.
What is the best first filter to use on Live Activity?
Start with event type and margin floor. Those two filters usually remove the most noise without hiding the events that matter.
Related Guides
How to use the HyperStats live activity feed to track opens, exits, liquidations, and higher-signal trader behavior in real time.
How to use HyperStats to follow whale wallets, watch real-time activity, and identify meaningful large-trader signals on Hyperliquid.
How to use HyperStats public alerts, Telegram/X alert channels, and daily recap posts without confusing filtered signal with the raw feed.