Headline: Notorious high‑leverage trader James Wynn liquidated again as Bitcoin breaks higher — sixth wipeout in two weeks James Wynn, the high‑profile trader known for pushing extreme leverage, has been liquidated again after Bitcoin’s rally — marking his sixth forced wipeout in roughly two weeks. On‑chain data shared today by Lookonchain and viewable via Hypurrscan shows Wynn’s Hyperliquid wallet was force‑closed at about $68,000 per BTC. The incident is the latest in a string of painful margin calls: Lookonchain’s post notes this was the sixth forced closure tied to that wallet over the past fortnight, on top of at least 194 historical liquidations tracked to the same account. A pattern of risk-on, high‑leverage bets Wynn rose to public prominence in 2025 after stringing together massive perp bets that, at one peak, reportedly put his Hyperliquid account more than $80 million in profit. He was an early backer of $PEPE and was later infamously on the wrong side of a 40x Bitcoin long that ballooned to an enormous notional size — reports put that exposure around $1.2–1.25 billion — with a liquidation price only a few thousand dollars below spot. Rather than pulling back, Wynn continued using the same aggressive playbook. In late May and early June 2025 he reportedly suffered a run that included at least nine liquidations in a single wallet and cumulative losses approaching $22 million. By year‑end, analysts and articles were using his account as a case study in the dangers of casino‑level leverage. Since mid‑March 2026 he’s leaned into fresh 40x BTC shorts again, opening exposures in the roughly $44k–$190k notional range. That leaves virtually no margin for error: at 40x, a 2–3% adverse move is often enough to trigger full liquidation. Wynn’s positions were repeatedly taken out by modest rallies — including a wipeout on March 25 and multiple 40x shorts destroyed by small price upticks by month‑end. Why Wynn’s blowups matter Beyond the drama, Wynn’s recurring liquidations underscore a structural dynamic in the current market: crowded short positioning plus high leverage creates ideal conditions for short squeezes. Traders and bots often monitor large, repeat offenders like Wynn as sentiment indicators — when he shorts into strength, those entries can become fuel for the moves that take him out. Lookonchain has repeatedly flagged Wynn’s activity this year, including a February tweet showing large BTC deposits tied to the trader (8,200 BTC, roughly $559 million), alleging correlation with price drops after such moves. The takeaway for traders is simple: in a trending Bitcoin market, hyper‑leverage and aggressive sizing can turn ordinary rallies into catastrophic margin calls. Wynn’s sixth liquidation in two weeks is a fresh reminder that big accounts can still be humbled when leverage, timing and price momentum collide. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news

