Seven accounts generated $2.78 million in profit by allegedly manipulating the XPL token on the Hyperliquid platform, Arkham Intelligence reported on April 3, 2026. The on-chain intelligence firm detailed a scheme involving leveraged long positions, the use of inflated collateral, and carefully timed withdrawals to exploit the decentralized exchange's mechanisms.

"The accounts used leveraged longs to inflate the price of XPL, posted the inflated XPL as collateral to borrow more funds, and then withdrew their profits," Arkham said in a report published on X.

The alleged manipulation centered on a cycle of accumulating XPL to artificially drive up its price. The perpetrators then allegedly used these price-inflated tokens as collateral to secure larger loans on Hyperliquid. This process was repeated, creating a feedback loop that allowed the accounts to systematically extract value from the platform, culminating in a $2.78 million profit.

The allegations raise serious questions about the integrity of markets on decentralized exchanges like Hyperliquid and could lead to a significant price decline for the XPL token and user withdrawals from the platform. This incident will likely attract regulatory scrutiny of Hyperliquid's security and market manipulation prevention protocols. As of 08:00 UTC on April 3, 2026, Hyperliquid has not publicly responded to Arkham's allegations. The price of the XPL token has dropped 15% in the last 24 hours, according to data from CoinGecko.

This event is not isolated in the DeFi space. Similar exploits have occurred on other platforms, such as the Mango Markets manipulation in 2022, where the attacker manipulated the price of the MNGO token to drain the platform of over $100 million. These incidents highlight the ongoing security challenges and risks of market manipulation that decentralized finance protocols face.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.