Bitget CEO slams Hyperliquid’s handling of “suspicious” incident involving JELLY token
26 März 2025 - 9:39PM
Cointelegraph


Gracy Chen, CEO of cryptocurrency exchange Bitget, criticized
Hyperliquid’s handling of a March 26 incident on its perpetual
exchange, saying it put the network at risk of becoming “FTX
2.0.”
On March 26, Hyperliquid, a blockchain network specializing in
trading, said it delisted
perpetual futures contracts for the JELLY token and would
reimburse users after identifying “evidence of suspicious market
activity” tied to the instruments.
The decision, which was reached by consensus among Hyperliquid’s
relatively small number of validators, flagged existing concerns
about the popular network’s perceived centralization.
“Despite presenting itself as an innovative decentralized
exchange with a bold vision, Hyperliquid operates more like an
offshore [centralized exchange],” Chen said, after saying
“Hyperliquid may be on track to become FTX 2.0.”
FTX was a cryptocurrency exchange run by Sam Bankman-Fried, who
was convicted of fraud in the US after FTX’s abrupt collapse in
2022.
Chen did not accuse Hyperliquid of specific legal infractions,
instead emphasizing what she considered to be Hyperliquid’s
“immature, unethical, and unprofessional” response to the
event.
“The decision to close the $JELLY market and force settlement of
positions at a favorable price sets a dangerous precedent,” Chen
said. “Trust—not capital—is the foundation of any exchange […] and
once lost, it’s almost impossible to recover.”
Source: Gracy
Chen
Related:
Hyperliquid delists JELLY perps, citing ‘suspicious’
activity
JELLY incident
The JELLY token was launched in January by Venmo co-founder
Iqram Magdon-Ismail as part of a Web3 social media project dubbed
JellyJelly.
It initially reached a market capitalization of roughly $250
million before falling to the single digit millions in the ensuing
weeks,
according to DexScreener.
On March 26, JELLY’s market cap soared to around $25 million
after Binance, the world’s most popular crypto exchange,
launched its own perpetual futures tied to the token.
The same day, a Hyperliquid trader “opened a massive $6M short
position on JellyJelly” and then “deliberately self-liquidated by
pumping JellyJelly’s price on-chain,” Abhi, founder of Web3 company
AP Collective, said in an X
post.
BitMEX founder Arthur Hayes said initial reactions to
Hyperliquid’s JELLY incident overestimated the network’s potential
reputational risks.
“Let’s stop pretending hyperliquid is decentralised. And then
stop pretending traders actually [care],” Hayes
said in
an X post. “Bet you $HYPE is back where [it] started in short order
cause degens gonna degen.”
Binance launched JELLY perps on March 26. Source:
Binance
Growing pains
On March 12, Hyperliquid grappled with a similar crisis caused
by a whale who intentionally liquidated a roughly $200 million long
Ether (ETH)
position.
The trade cost depositors into Hyperliquid’s liquidity pool,
HLP, roughly $4 million in losses after forcing the pool to unwind
the trade at unfavorable prices. Since then, Hyperliquid has
increased collateral requirements for open positions to “reduce
the systemic impact of large positions with hypothetical market
impact upon closing.”
Hyperliquid operates the most popular leveraged perpetuals
trading platform, controlling roughly 70% of market share,
according to a January report by asset manager VanEck.
Perpetual futures, or “perps,” are leveraged futures contracts
with no expiry date. Traders deposit margin collateral, such as
USDC, to secure open positions.
According to
L2Beat, Hyperliquid has two main validator sets, each comprising
four validators. By comparison, rival chains such as Solana and
Ethereum are supported by approximately 1,000 and 1 million
validators, respectively.
More validators generally lessen the risk of a small group of
insiders manipulating a blockchain.
Magazine: What
are native rollups? Full guide to Ethereum’s latest
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...
Continue reading Bitget CEO slams Hyperliquid’s
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