Hyperliquid GOLD Trader Loses About $400K After TWAP Order Mistake

Hyperliquid GOLD Trader Loses About $400K After TWAP Order Mistake

A Hyperliquid trader identified as Mk4 accidentally turned a small GOLD position adjustment into a massive short-side order, creating one of the clearest recent examples of how execution settings can magnify risk in onchain derivatives.

The trader was reportedly long only a few hundred thousand dollars of GOLD and intended to reduce the position with a reduce-only TWAP. Instead, the order became a 24,000 GOLD short worth about $109 million, scheduled to execute over roughly 50 minutes. Around 17,600 GOLD, or about $80 million, filled before the trader noticed the mistake and stopped the TWAP.

The market impact showed up quickly. Gold fell about 0.3% in the first 10 minutes after the TWAP began, while Hyperliquid’s GOLD market moved roughly 0.5% lower over the same window. The sharper move on Hyperliquid reflected how a large automated sell program can push one side of the order book even when the underlying asset moves less.

Mk4 then began buying back the short position through another TWAP over the following hours, with the loss estimated at about $400,000. The mistake turned a routine position reduction into a large unintended short and a six-figure loss.

Reduce-Only Settings Become The Core Risk Point

TWAP orders are designed to split large trades into smaller executions over time rather than hitting the order book all at once. On Hyperliquid, a TWAP order executes through 30-second suborders, with suborders constrained by a maximum slippage setting. That structure can reduce immediate price impact, but it also means an incorrect order can keep executing until the trader cancels it or the full schedule completes.

Reduce-only protection is supposed to keep a trade from opening the opposite side of a position. A reduce-only order should reduce an existing position instead of increasing exposure or flipping direction. When that protection is not applied correctly, a trader trying to trim a long can accidentally become short.

The size of the order turned the error into a market event. A few hundred thousand dollars of intended exposure became tens of millions of dollars in executed notional. In a fast derivatives market, that kind of mismatch can move price before the trader has time to react.

Onchain Perps Get A Live Execution Stress Test

The mistake lands in a market where Hyperliquid has become one of the dominant centers for decentralized derivatives activity. Recent perp DEX data put Hyperliquid far ahead of rival decentralized derivatives exchanges, with liquidity, leverage and open interest increasingly clustered on the same platform.

That concentration improves execution for large traders, but it also makes order-book behavior more visible when something goes wrong. A mistaken TWAP on a thinner exchange might fail to fill quickly. On a deep market, it can execute enough size to move price before the trader cancels it.

Hyperliquid’s expansion into real-world asset markets raises the stakes. GOLD perps give crypto-native traders fast exposure to a macro asset without custody, vaulting or traditional broker rails. That speed is useful, but it also brings commodity-linked markets into the same fat-finger, automation and liquidation environment that already defines crypto perps.

Mk4’s mistake did not require an exploit or a broken market to create damage. One wrong order setup turned a small GOLD position adjustment into roughly $80 million of filled short exposure and an estimated $400,000 loss before the trader could fully reverse the trade.

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