The post Outdated algorithm caused $650M excess losses on Hyperliquid, report appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Two months on from October 10’s crypto market meltdown, which saw $19 billion of positions liquidated, Gauntlet CEO Tarun Chitra argues that common autodeleveraging (ADL) mechanisms led to massive losses on Hyperliquid. In a lengthy post to X, Chitra says an excess of $650 million was autodeleveraged from profitable traders’ positions. The amount, he claims, was 28x more than the potential bad debt facing the exchanges who used ADL. This “massacre of the innocent” could allegedly be avoided with new ADL algorithms, described in an accompanying 95-page report. Did @HyperliquidX autodeleverage (ADL) $650m of PNL that it didn’t have to? Was this 28x more than the minimal necessary? Did almost every exchange (incl. @binance) copy-pasta a Huobi heuristic from 2015? Can we do better in 2026? 𝐘𝐞𝐬 (+ a new paper) https://t.co/XNeohPg1pN — Tarun Chitra (@tarunchitra) December 9, 2025 Read more: How Binance’s USDe ‘depeg’ cost the exchange millions Autodeleveraging on autopilot Chitra describes ADL as a “last resort” which applies a “haircut” to profitable traders to “cover the bad debt of insolvent positions.”  The 10-year-old “Queue” algorithm is widely used by perpetual futures platforms such as Binance, Hyperliquid, and Lighter. However, under extreme market conditions, when ADL is activated repeatedly, “the greedy Queue strategy completely fails.” The strategy assigns “haircuts” as a function of profits and leverage which, Chitra says, concentrates losses on the biggest winners, while overshooting the necessary amount to be liquidated. He suggests a “risk-aware pro-rata” algorithm which assigns ADL based on the leverage of each position. The post recognizes that “a perfect [ADL] strategy does not exist.” However, optimizing for three elements of a so-called ADL Trillema (solvency, fairness and revenue), and running on October 10 Hyperliquid data, the new approach appears to significantly outperform Queue. Chitra ends by urging for further innovation in the… The post Outdated algorithm caused $650M excess losses on Hyperliquid, report appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Two months on from October 10’s crypto market meltdown, which saw $19 billion of positions liquidated, Gauntlet CEO Tarun Chitra argues that common autodeleveraging (ADL) mechanisms led to massive losses on Hyperliquid. In a lengthy post to X, Chitra says an excess of $650 million was autodeleveraged from profitable traders’ positions. The amount, he claims, was 28x more than the potential bad debt facing the exchanges who used ADL. This “massacre of the innocent” could allegedly be avoided with new ADL algorithms, described in an accompanying 95-page report. Did @HyperliquidX autodeleverage (ADL) $650m of PNL that it didn’t have to? Was this 28x more than the minimal necessary? Did almost every exchange (incl. @binance) copy-pasta a Huobi heuristic from 2015? Can we do better in 2026? 𝐘𝐞𝐬 (+ a new paper) https://t.co/XNeohPg1pN — Tarun Chitra (@tarunchitra) December 9, 2025 Read more: How Binance’s USDe ‘depeg’ cost the exchange millions Autodeleveraging on autopilot Chitra describes ADL as a “last resort” which applies a “haircut” to profitable traders to “cover the bad debt of insolvent positions.”  The 10-year-old “Queue” algorithm is widely used by perpetual futures platforms such as Binance, Hyperliquid, and Lighter. However, under extreme market conditions, when ADL is activated repeatedly, “the greedy Queue strategy completely fails.” The strategy assigns “haircuts” as a function of profits and leverage which, Chitra says, concentrates losses on the biggest winners, while overshooting the necessary amount to be liquidated. He suggests a “risk-aware pro-rata” algorithm which assigns ADL based on the leverage of each position. The post recognizes that “a perfect [ADL] strategy does not exist.” However, optimizing for three elements of a so-called ADL Trillema (solvency, fairness and revenue), and running on October 10 Hyperliquid data, the new approach appears to significantly outperform Queue. Chitra ends by urging for further innovation in the…

Outdated algorithm caused $650M excess losses on Hyperliquid, report

2025/12/11 02:33

Two months on from October 10’s crypto market meltdown, which saw $19 billion of positions liquidated, Gauntlet CEO Tarun Chitra argues that common autodeleveraging (ADL) mechanisms led to massive losses on Hyperliquid.

In a lengthy post to X, Chitra says an excess of $650 million was autodeleveraged from profitable traders’ positions. The amount, he claims, was 28x more than the potential bad debt facing the exchanges who used ADL.

This “massacre of the innocent” could allegedly be avoided with new ADL algorithms, described in an accompanying 95-page report.

Read more: How Binance’s USDe ‘depeg’ cost the exchange millions

Autodeleveraging on autopilot

Chitra describes ADL as a “last resort” which applies a “haircut” to profitable traders to “cover the bad debt of insolvent positions.” 

The 10-year-old “Queue” algorithm is widely used by perpetual futures platforms such as Binance, Hyperliquid, and Lighter.

However, under extreme market conditions, when ADL is activated repeatedly, “the greedy Queue strategy completely fails.”

The strategy assigns “haircuts” as a function of profits and leverage which, Chitra says, concentrates losses on the biggest winners, while overshooting the necessary amount to be liquidated.

He suggests a “risk-aware pro-rata” algorithm which assigns ADL based on the leverage of each position.

The post recognizes that “a perfect [ADL] strategy does not exist.” However, optimizing for three elements of a so-called ADL Trillema (solvency, fairness and revenue), and running on October 10 Hyperliquid data, the new approach appears to significantly outperform Queue.

Chitra ends by urging for further innovation in the design of algorithmic clearing: “ADL was invented as a band-aid in 2015. We haven’t even begun to explore the design space!

Read more: Aster vs Hyperliquid: inside the high-stakes perp DEX war

Hyperlivid

In response to Chitra’s post, Hyperliquid’s Jeff Yan quipped, “Those who can, do. Those who can’t, fud.” 

However, rather than responding directly to the claims of inefficient autodeleveraging, he takes issue with the description of the relationship between ADL and Hyperliquid’s HLP insurance fund.

He accused Chitra of “spread[ing] lies masked by fancy ML terms to sound smart.”

Other Hyperliquid supporters pitched in, pointing to apparent inaccuracies and bias due to investments in competitors.

Read more: ZKasino exploiter saw $27M liquidated on Hyperliquid trade

In the wake of the October 10 crash, Yan argued that “ADLs net made users hundreds of millions of dollars by closing profitable short positions at favorable prices.”

He highlighted that the platform’s ADL queue incorporates “both leverage used and unrealized pnl,” while thanking users for feedback. He also alluded to research “on whether there can be substantial improvements that merit more complexity.”

Got a tip? Send us an email securely via Protos Leaks. For more informed news, follow us on XBluesky, and Google News, or subscribe to our YouTube channel.

Source: https://protos.com/outdated-algorithm-caused-650m-excess-losses-on-hyperliquid-report/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

VanEck Targets Stablecoins & Next-Gen ICOs

VanEck Targets Stablecoins & Next-Gen ICOs

The post VanEck Targets Stablecoins & Next-Gen ICOs appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Welcome to the US Crypto News Morning Briefing—your essential rundown of the most important developments in crypto for the day ahead. Grab a coffee because the firms shaping crypto’s future are not just building products, but also trying to reshape how capital flows. Crypto News of the Day: VanEck Maps Next Frontier of Crypto Venture Investing VanEck, a Wall Street player known for financial “firsts,” is pushing that legacy into Web3. The firsts include pioneering US gold funds and launching one of the earliest spot Bitcoin ETFs. Sponsored Sponsored “Financial instruments have always been a kind of tokenization. From seashells to traveler’s checks, from relational databases to today’s on-chain assets. You could even joke that VanEck’s first gold mutual funds were the original ‘tokenized gold,’” Juan C. Lopez, General Partner at VanEck Ventures, told BeInCrypto. That same instinct drives the firm’s venture bets. Lopez said VanEck goes beyond writing checks and brings the full weight of the firm. This extends from regulatory proximity to product experiments to founders building the next phase of crypto infrastructure. Asked about key investment priorities, Lopez highlighted stablecoins. “We care deeply about three questions: How do we accelerate stablecoin ubiquity? What will users want to do with them once highly distributed? And what net new assets can we construct now that we have sophisticated market infrastructure?” Lopez added. However, VanEck is not limiting itself to the hottest narrative, acknowledging that decentralized finance (DeFi) is having a renaissance. The VanEck executive also noted that success will depend on new approaches to identity and programmable compliance layered on public blockchains. Backing Legion With A New Model for ICOs Sponsored Sponsored That compliance-first angle explains VanEck Ventures’ recent co-lead of Legion’s $5 million seed round alongside Brevan Howard. Legion aims to reinvent token fundraising by making early-stage access…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 03:52