The survivors nobody talks about: two of Hyperliquid's oldest vaults
Age is the cheapest filter in vault-picking. Two of Hyperliquid's oldest vaults — one running 2.6 years — survived 48% drawdowns and came back. But one now sits in cash and the other is an underwater long with a 77% whale. Longevity buys a look, not a deposit.
Age is the cheapest filter in vault-picking. Two of every three vaults are already in the graveyard, so a vault that has survived — lived through real drawdowns and come back — has proven something a dazzling six-month-old can't. I pulled the two oldest user vaults still standing with a strong risk-adjusted record: Citadel, running for about 2.6 years (one of the very first on Hyperliquid), and Delta_01, about 22 months. Both compounded through 48–49% drawdowns and recovered. And both carry a lesson about why "old and high-Calmar" still isn't a free pass.
The one-line verdict: survivorship earns these two a serious look — but one is now sitting entirely in cash (its edge on pause, or gone), and the other is a concentrated directional bet, underwater, with a single whale holding 77%. Longevity buys a look, not a deposit.
What two years of surviving looks like
Citadel (leader 25%) is among the oldest vaults on the platform. It banked about +$288k over 2.6 years and kept it — it sits near its all-time peak — positive 61% of the time, Calmar around 5.6. The striking part: right now it holds zero positions, entirely in cash. A disciplined survivor that took its chips off the table… or one whose edge has quietly stopped firing. The on-chain data can't tell you which, and that honesty matters.
Delta_01 (leader 23%) is about 22 months old with an even higher Calmar on paper (~5.7). But today it's net long ETH, HYPE, PENDLE and ZEC, sitting on an $85k unrealized loss, having given back roughly a third of its peak profit ($738k to $502k). And one wallet holds 77% of the entire vault — if that whale leaves, what's left lurches.
The receipts
| Metric | Citadel | Delta_01 |
|---|---|---|
| Age | ~2.6 years | ~22 months |
| Lifetime profit | +$288k (near peak) | +$502k (from $738k peak) |
| Max drawdown survived | ~48% | ~49% |
| Calmar | ~5.6 | ~5.7 |
| Positive periods | 61% | 57% |
| حصة القائد | 25% | 23% |
| Largest depositor | 33% | 77% |
| Right now | In cash (0 positions) | Long, −$85k unrealized |
Reading the risk
They passed the test that matters. Both lived through ~48% drawdowns and recovered. That resilience is real, and it's exactly what no young vault can show you — the single best reason to weight age, and the same reason a proven record beats a hot streak.
But "survived" is past tense. Citadel is idle; Delta_01 is underwater and concentrated. A great multi-year record doesn't mean the edge is still live today — you have to check what the vault is doing, not just what it did.
The crowd's absence is a clue. Both hold only ~$0.6M despite multi-year records and high Calmar. When a strong, old vault stays tiny, ask why — lumpy returns, a niche strategy, limited capacity, or an edge that faded. And remember that old percentage figures are flattered by early gains on a small base, which is why I lean on Calmar, drawdown and dollar profit instead of an eye-popping annualized headline.
الخلاصة
Longevity is the cheapest, most underrated filter on the leaderboard, and these two earned it the hard way — surviving drawdowns that erased flashier names. But age opens the door; it doesn't seat you at the table. A survivor sitting in cash and a survivor underwater next to a whale both prove the same thing: you still have to read what the vault is doing today. Old earns a look — the look still has to pass the rest of the checklist.
Figures from Hyperliquid's public API and our twice-daily snapshots; leverage is the live gross figure. Annualized return figures for long-lived vaults are flattered by early gains on a small base, so I've leaned on Calmar, drawdown and lifetime profit. Nothing here is financial advice — one trader showing his work.