In brief
- HYPE rose about 6% even as Iran headlines drove weekend volatility.
- Hyperliquid absorbed early volume as price moves formed before traditional futures reopened.
- Weekend shocks may turn always-on perps into a repeat venue for early risk pricing and fee growth, Decrypt was told.
As tensions escalated over Iran-related headlines this weekend, Hyperliquid’s HYPE token rose about 6% as traders turned to the always-on decentralized perpetuals platform to express risk while many traditional markets were closed.
Bitcoin and other risk assets fell as Iran-related tensions escalated, while oil and gold moved higher amid a broader risk-off shift. Volatility rose, and funding rates turned negative across crypto derivatives markets as traders adjusted positioning.
Hyperliquid is a decentralized exchange that lets traders buy and sell perpetual futures contracts directly on-chain without using a centralized intermediary.
Its native token, HYPE, fell to about $26.2 at the end of February, in line with the broader market pullback, before surging to roughly $32 as volatility picked up on Sunday.
The token is up about 25% year to date, though it remains well below its September peak near $58, per CoinGecko data.
Trading volume over the last 24 hours for the exchange reached a near one-month high on Saturday, rising to a peak of $200 million before dissipating as traders digested the risk premium to global energy markets.
Always-on trading
Hyperliquid was one of the few venues open and liquid as volatility picked up over the weekend, drawing trading activity at a time when equity futures and many centralized crypto platforms were either closed or operating with thinner books.
“As a decentralized perpetuals platform, it was one of the few venues actually open and liquid when the Iran headlines hit, and in a weekend event where centralized venues are closed off to face thin liquidity,” Ryan McMillin, chief investment officer at Merkle Tree Capital, told Decrypt.
Geopolitical shocks “make the case for non-custodial, always-on trading infrastructure,” McMillin added, noting how HYPE appears to sit “at an interesting intersection.”
Hyperliquid’s token “benefits both from volume-driven fee revenue during chaos events and from any broader rotation away from centralised exchange risk,” he said. “It’s worth watching whether weekend crisis volume is becoming a structural tailwind rather than a one-off.”
For HYPE, this ties geopolitical shocks directly to trading volume and fee activity, supporting the view that off-hours crises may become a repeat source of demand.
First response
Decentralized platforms like Hyperliquid’s are increasingly serving as “the first-response venue for geopolitical risk,” Dominick John, analyst at Kronos Research, told Decrypt.
“Institutions leverage these always-on markets to anticipate moves in conventional venues, using on-chain perpetuals to hedge before broader markets open,” John explained, adding that such a function positions decentralized venues “for early risk pricing.”
Weekend geopolitical shocks provide decentralized perpetuals exchanges “a structural edge” that captures “risk-driven flow while TradFi sleeps,” he added.
While platforms like Hyperliquid could serve that purpose, most other perpetual decentralized exchanges, including its own HIP-3 markets, would still need to “achieve much deeper order book liquidity to onboard institutional traders,” Siwon Huh, researcher at Four Pillars, told Decrypt.
On Hyperliquid, new markets require HYPE to be staked, and much of the platform’s fees go toward HYPE buybacks, meaning volatility and trading growth can directly increase demand for the token, which has also shown lower correlation to Bitcoin than many other altcoins, he explained.
“For now, they appear to have already established themselves as highly useful exchanges at the retail level,” Huh said, adding that the weekend geopolitical shocks are likely to “capture demand from liquidity providers requiring hedging at a much larger scale.”
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