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·8 min read·Dexter

Advanced Chart Analysis on HyperX: Fill Markers, Position Lines & Coin Charts

HyperX now overlays your Hyperliquid trading data directly on TradingView charts. See fill markers scaled by trade size, entry and liquidation price lines, aggregated buy/sell averages, and per-coin K-line charts with your trade history.

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The Gap Between Charts and Trading Data

Every trader on Hyperliquid has access to price charts and a detailed record of their fills, positions, and liquidation levels. The problem is that these two things have traditionally lived in separate places. You look at a chart to read price action. You look at a table to review your trades. But the most useful perspective — seeing your actual trades plotted on the price chart where they happened — has been missing.

Did you enter that ETH long at the local low or were you chasing? How close did price get to your liquidation level during that drawdown? Answering these questions requires cross-referencing timestamps between tables and charts, mentally mapping fills to candles, and building a picture that should just be visible.

HyperX now renders your Hyperliquid trading data directly on TradingView charts — fill markers, position lines, aggregated price levels, and per-coin charts with your full trade history.

Fill Markers: Every Trade on the Chart

When you view a chart on HyperX with overlay data available, your fills appear as markers directly on the candlesticks where they occurred. Each marker represents a trade execution, positioned at the candle corresponding to its timestamp and at the price where it filled.

Action Type Labels

Not all fills are equal. HyperX labels each fill marker with its action type so you can see not just where you traded, but what you were doing:

  • Open — A new position was initiated, the starting point of a trade idea.
  • Close — A position was fully exited and the trade idea is complete.
  • Increase — You added to an existing position. Were you averaging in at better prices or doubling down on a losing thesis?
  • Decrease — You partially reduced a position. Taking profit, cutting risk, or scaling out.
  • Flip — The position direction reversed. A long became a short or vice versa.
  • Liquidation — The position was forcefully closed by the exchange. These markers represent risk management failures you can learn from.

Scanning a chart immediately reveals the narrative of a trade: open here, increase there, decrease as price stalled, close at the top. Or the less comfortable version: open, increase, increase again, liquidated. Both stories are worth seeing clearly.

Size-Scaled Markers

A $500 fill and a $50,000 fill should not look the same on a chart. HyperX scales fill markers by trade size, ranging from 14 pixels for the smallest fills to 32 pixels for the largest. The scaling is relative to the fills currently visible, so the visual weight always represents how significant each fill was compared to others in the same view. Large markers jump out as the entries and exits that moved your PnL, while small markers provide context without visual clutter.

Aggregated Fills and Average Price Lines

On shorter timeframes or during active trading, multiple fills can land on the same candle. HyperX aggregates fills that share a candle rather than stacking markers on top of each other, combining buys and sells with the total size displayed.

The chart also draws weighted average price lines for buy fills and sell fills across the visible range. If you scaled into a BTC long across five separate fills over three days, the average buy line shows your effective entry price without any manual calculation. The average buy line appears in the trading up color and the average sell line in the trading down color, positioned on the right side of the chart to avoid overlapping with position labels on the left.

Position Overlay: Entry and Liquidation Lines

When you have an active position in the coin you are charting, HyperX draws two horizontal lines that stay visible as you scroll and zoom.

The entry price line is a solid, bold line at your position's average entry price. Its label includes position direction (long or short), size, current unrealized PnL, and return on equity. As candles form in real time, you see exactly how far price is from your entry and how your PnL evolves relative to chart structure.

The liquidation price line appears as a dashed orange line below the entry for longs, above it for shorts. Your risk boundary is visible at all times without checking a separate panel. During volatile periods, seeing a wick approach your liquidation level is a visceral reminder about position sizing.

Both lines update in real time. Add to a position and the entry recalculates. Close the position and the lines disappear.

Coin Chart: Deep Dive Into Any Asset

HyperX includes a dedicated coin chart for detailed per-asset analysis. When reviewing a trader's positions or trade history, clicking any row opens the coin chart for that asset with the trader's fills overlaid.

Click-to-Chart From Tables

Every position row and trade history entry is a gateway to the coin chart. Click an ETH position, and a chart opens showing ETH's K-line data with that trader's ETH fills plotted as markers. Click a historical BTC trade, and you see the BTC chart around the time that trade happened. The context follows your click — the right coin, the right timeframe, and the right fills are loaded automatically.

Lazy Loading by Visible Range

Trade history for active traders can span thousands of fills. HyperX fetches fills based on the chart's visible time range rather than loading everything at once. Scroll backward in time and the chart requests fills for the newly visible range. Zoom into a specific day for full detail, or zoom out to a monthly view where aggregation handles the density. A whale with ten thousand fills loads just as quickly as a new trader with fifty, because only the relevant slice is requested.

Default 4-Hour Timeframe

The coin chart defaults to 4-hour candles, optimized for crypto trading analysis. This timeframe balances detail and context — enough candles to reveal multi-day trends while keeping individual candles meaningful. For perpetual trading, it is the sweet spot where most swing setups are visible and intraday noise is filtered out. Other timeframes are always available.

Fullscreen Mode

A fullscreen toggle expands the chart to the entire viewport, giving maximum resolution on price action and fill markers. This is particularly valuable when analyzing dense periods with many overlapping trades.

Overlay Settings: Full Control

Every overlay element is individually configurable through the chart settings dialog:

  • Position line — Toggle on or off, customize the color
  • Liquidation line — Toggle independently, with its own color
  • TP/SL order lines — Show or hide take-profit and stop-loss levels
  • Average buy/sell lines — Toggle each aggregated average independently
  • Fill markers — Enable or disable markers entirely
  • Action type labels — Show or hide the Open/Close/Increase/Decrease labels on markers

Settings persist in local storage across sessions. A reset option restores defaults.

How This Changes Analysis

The cumulative effect is that the TradingView chart transforms from a price-only display into a complete trading record in the context of price action.

Post-trade review becomes visual. You see fills directly on the candlesticks instead of cross-referencing tables. The narrative of each trade is visible alongside the market structure that drove your decisions.

Risk awareness becomes constant. The liquidation line means the distance to forced exit is never abstract — it is a line on the chart relative to recent price action.

Trader evaluation gains depth. When evaluating traders for copy trading, fill markers reveal execution quality that statistics alone cannot. A 60% win rate tells you the outcome. Markers tell you whether the trader entered at support, chased breakouts, or averaged into drawdowns.

What Is Available Now

Chart overlays are live on HyperX. The feature set includes:

  • Fill markers with action type labels (Open, Close, Increase, Decrease, Flip, Liquidation)
  • Size-scaled markers from 14px to 32px based on relative trade size
  • Aggregated fills per candle with weighted average buy and sell price lines
  • Position overlay with entry price line (size, PnL, ROE) and liquidation price line
  • Coin chart accessible by clicking any position or trade history row
  • Lazy loading of fills by visible chart range
  • Fullscreen toggle, default 4-hour timeframe
  • Full overlay settings with per-element toggle and color customization

The charts use TradingView's charting library with a custom Hyperliquid datafeed, so you get drawing tools, indicators, and multiple timeframes — enhanced with your trading data overlaid on the price action.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do fill markers work for any trader or only my own account? Fill markers work for any wallet address you view in HyperX. When analyzing another trader's profile, their fills appear on the coin chart. When trading with your connected wallet, your own fills appear.

Can I disable overlays if I want a clean chart? Yes. Every overlay element has an independent toggle in the chart settings dialog. Disable all overlays for a pure price chart, or enable only the specific elements you want.

Do the overlay colors match my theme? Yes. Overlay colors dynamically read from the current theme's CSS variables, matching light mode, dark mode, or custom themes. Individual colors can also be customized in the settings dialog.

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On-chain analyst and builder at HyperX (hyperx.trade), the Hyperliquid trading analytics and copy trading platform. Focused on smart money tracking and building tools that give every trader an edge on-chain.

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Trading involves substantial risk. HyperX does not provide financial advice.