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Hyperliquid Whale Tracker Guide

Learn how to track Hyperliquid whale wallets, live opens, exits, liquidations, and alert-worthy moves with HyperStats.

Use HyperStats to track Hyperliquid whale wallets, large opens, exits, and liquidations without digging through a noisy raw feed.

Use the whale-tracking workflow in three steps: identify strong wallets on Top Traders, monitor live events on Live Activity, and drill into the full wallet page when you see a move worth investigating.

In This Guide

Step 1
What counts as whale activity

On HyperStats, whale tracking is built around large position opens, closes, reductions, and liquidations. The goal is to surface activity that is actually informative for market structure and trader behavior.

Step 2
Best pages to use

Start on Live Activity for the real-time feed, then move to a trader wallet page if you want the full position history and PnL context.

Step 3
How to interpret a whale move

A large open is not automatically bullish or bearish alpha. The useful context is direction, margin deployed, leverage, token, and whether the trader has a strong record over time.

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 counts as whale activity

On HyperStats, whale tracking is built around large position opens, closes, reductions, and liquidations. The goal is to surface activity that is actually informative for market structure and trader behavior.

The public alerting layer is stricter than the raw feed. That helps users avoid spam and makes the biggest wallet moves easier to notice and share.

Best pages to use

Start on Live Activity for the real-time feed, then move to a trader wallet page if you want the full position history and PnL context.

Use Top Traders to find strong wallets first. Watching a high-quality wallet is more useful than watching random size alone.

How to interpret a whale move

A large open is not automatically bullish or bearish alpha. The useful context is direction, margin deployed, leverage, token, and whether the trader has a strong record over time.

Likewise, a large reduction can mean profit taking, hedging, or risk reduction. The wallet page helps distinguish those cases by showing realized PnL and the remaining position state.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does HyperStats show every single whale move?

The raw platform tracks far more events than the public alert layer shows. Public alerts are intentionally filtered so the biggest and most useful moves stand out.

Can I use whale tracking for copy trading?

You can use HyperStats to study and follow wallet behavior, but the platform does not place trades for you. The best workflow is to identify high-quality traders and then monitor their live actions.

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