Crypto traders are increasingly using the DeFi derivatives platform Hyperliquid to speculate on oil prices, in the latest sign that always-on crypto markets are beginning to absorb trading tied to global macro shocks.
Oil-linked perpetual futures on Hyperliquid processed roughly $991 million in trading volume over the past 24 hours, according to data shared Wednesday on X by James Wang, director of product marketing at Cerebras Systems. Comparable contracts recorded about $75,000 in volume on Coinbase over the same period.
The disparity underscores how liquidity for synthetic commodity exposure is clustering on crypto-native derivatives venues rather than traditional exchanges or U.S.-based crypto platforms.
Order-book data in the oil market shows large resting orders and relatively tight spreads, suggesting participation from professional liquidity providers alongside retail traders.
Crude prices surged on Monday amid fears the conflict could further disrupt shipments through the Strait of Hormuz, briefly pushing Brent crude to about $119.50 a barrel before retreating to roughly $91–$100 after President Donald Trump suggested the war involving Iran might soon de-escalate.
By Wednesday evening in New York trading, Brent crude was hovering around $90–$92 a barrel as markets continued to digest developments and the prospect of emergency oil stockpile releases.
The activity follows this month’s first weekend surge in trading on the exchange as tensions tied to Iran rattled global markets, helping to push the price of its native token, HYPE, above $32. It is up a further 6% on the day to $36.33, according to CoinGecko data.
As previously reported by Decrypt, traders have turned to the platform amid headlines surrounding tensions in the Middle East while conventional markets, at times, remain closed.
Hyperliquid lets traders take leveraged positions through perpetual futures contracts collateralized by stablecoins, primarily USDC, allowing them to speculate without opening brokerage accounts or accessing regulated commodity futures venues such as the CME Group.
The exchange's system is divided between HyperCore and HyperEVM. HyperCore runs the platform fully on-chain, with spot and perpetual futures order books recording every order, trade, and liquidation with near-instant finality and supporting up to about 200,000 orders per second, according to its white paper. HyperEVM, meanwhile, provides an Ethereum-compatible environment where developers can deploy smart contracts and build applications that interact with the exchange’s liquidity.
It’s a feature that has attracted participants since its mainnet launch in 2023, helping to ferment growth on the exchange while doubling the token's total market cap to over $8.8 billion in one year.
For Hyperliquid’s native token, HYPE, trading tied to macro volatility can have direct financial implications. The protocol directs a portion of trading fees toward token buybacks, linking spikes in derivatives activity to potential demand for the asset.
Analysts say geopolitical shocks may continue to drive episodic bursts of trading on always-on crypto venues as traders seek to position ahead of global events.
If sustained, that dynamic could position platforms like Hyperliquid as an early outlet for traders seeking to price global risk ahead of conventional markets, they say.
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