Hyperliquid’s HYPE rally is bigger than a new all-time high

Hyperliquid’s HYPE rally is bigger than a new all-time high

The Hyperliquid HYPE rally reached a new HYPE all-time high of $68.64 on May 30, extending a month that has already delivered roughly 50% in gains and over $1.4 billion in single-day trading volume.

The HYPE price move came the day after the CFTC approved KalshiEX's BTCPERP contract, the first Bitcoin perpetual futures product cleared for listing on a US-regulated exchange, and one day after ICE CEO Jeffrey Sprecher said that Hyperliquid is “bigger than Nasdaq” and that his team has met the founders multiple times.

Two US-listed spot HYPE ETFs, Bitwise's BHYP and 21Shares' THYP, had already crossed $136 million in cumulative net inflows within 13 trading sessions by May 29.

Traders are reevaluating Hyperliquid's position in a market where the product category it built at scale just received US regulatory recognition, where a regulated ETF wrapper gives institutional allocators direct HYPE access, and where the owner of the NYSE is publicly treating an 11-person offshore team as a structural benchmark.

All three inputs arriving simultaneously reframes HYPE from a DeFi perp token into a public market proxy for always-on derivatives infrastructure.

Driver Fresh datapoint Why it matters
ETF demand BHYP + THYP crossed $136M in cumulative net inflows within 13 sessions Turns HYPE into a regulated allocation product
CFTC validation KalshiEX’s BTCPERP became the first U.S.-regulated Bitcoin perpetual futures product Validates the product category Hyperliquid built at scale
Wall Street attention ICE CEO said Hyperliquid is “bigger than Nasdaq” in trading activity Moves Hyperliquid from crypto-native venue to exchange-infrastructure benchmark

HYPE ETF inflows as the clearest measurable catalyst

Kairos Research found that HYPE spot ETFs absorbed 1.04% of HYPE’s market cap in their first 10 trading days, ahead of comparable early ETF launches for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana.

The week ending May 22 saw combined inflows of $68 million, a near-10x surge from $6.89 million in the partial launch week, according to Farside Investors' data.

The ETF channel converts HYPE from a trade that requires Hyperliquid access into a regulated allocation product. A traditional portfolio manager buying BHYP on the NYSE never interacts with the protocol directly, which removes the single largest barrier between institutional capital and HYPE exposure.

Bitwise reinforces that demand loop further by directing 10% of BHYP management fees toward purchasing HYPE and staking those tokens on its corporate balance sheet, building structural buying pressure into the fund's operating model.

A pending Grayscale staking ETF filing, if approved, would add a third institutional buyer competing for the same concentrated float.

CFTC Bitcoin perpetual futures validation and the optionality reprice

The CFTC's May 29 approval of KalshiEX's BTCPERP addressed the clearest structural ceiling on HYPE: US access.

Hyperliquid currently geofences American users and operates outside the US regulatory perimeter, and the CFTC's action changes the regulatory terrain around that constraint without removing it.

By approving a domestically listed, spot-price-referenced perpetual futures contract under the Commodity Exchange Act's Section 5c(c)(4), the CFTC confirmed that perpetual futures belong inside a US-regulated market structure.

CFTC Chairman Mike Selig framed the decision explicitly as bringing crypto perpetuals “onto regulated exchanges that uphold customer protections and market integrity.”

For Hyperliquid, this opens paths such as regulated wrappers, licensed front ends, institutional partnerships structured around CFTC-compliant products, or future case-by-case product approvals.

The CFTC also issued a 24/7 trading advisory noting that cryptoasset derivatives may be well-suited for continuous trading given digital infrastructure and global reach, language that precisely describes Hyperliquid's operating model.

Traders appear to be pricing that optionality as narrowing faster than any specific product approval would justify. The surface risk, represented by Coinbase and Kalshi as regulated competitors eating into Hyperliquid's perp volume, is real, but $86 trillion in annual perp volume ran entirely offshore before May 29.

Regulated US venues expanding the addressable market benefits the dominant venue in that market, provided it retains execution quality.

Validation case Competition case
Perpetual futures now have a path into U.S.-regulated markets Coinbase and Kalshi can capture flows Hyperliquid cannot legally serve
Hyperliquid proved the demand before regulators moved Regulated competitors have compliance infrastructure and U.S. customer bases
24/7 trading advisory fits Hyperliquid’s operating model U.S. approval does not equal Hyperliquid approval
Expands the addressable market for perps Could compress Hyperliquid’s 70% decentralized perp market share
Narrows the “regulatory impossibility” discount Raises the bar for Hyperliquid’s own compliance path

Wall Street validation and Hyperliquid perpetual futures volume

Sprecher's remarks moved HYPE nearly 10% on May 29 alone, and what he said goes beyond explaining the session move.

He called Hyperliquid “bigger than Nasdaq” in terms of trading activity, since it clears approximately $180 billion in monthly perpetual futures volume and holds over 70% of the decentralized perp market, and said he wishes he were young enough to be building it himself.

He also pointed to Hyperliquid's SpaceX perpetual futures market as potentially generating more synthetic volume than the SpaceX IPO itself when shares begin trading on June 11.

That specific claim, from the CEO of a company that owns the NYSE, Euronext, and ICE Futures, positions Hyperliquid as the venue that solved pre-IPO price discovery for a company that Nasdaq and NYSE will list.

Grayscale's framing of Hyperliquid as a “financial services juggernaut” underpins the same thesis with operating data, noting $800 million in revenue in 2025, $2.9 trillion in perpetual futures volume, roughly $10 billion in open interest, and expansion through HIP-3 and HIP-4 into tokenized equities, commodities, and prediction-style markets.

Hyperliquid’s HYPE buybacks direct nearly 99% of protocol revenue toward daily open-market purchases, which mechanically tightens supply against rising ETF demand. Taken together, the revenue base, the buyback model, and the ETF-driven institutional channel give the HYPE rally a fundamental anchor that the token's prior all-time highs lacked.

The price Hyperliquid now has to justify

Coinbase and Kalshi both move to capture perp flow that previously had no US home, and both carry compliance infrastructure, brand recognition, and US customer bases that Hyperliquid cannot legally serve directly.

Cartoon depiction of HYPE token hype around perpetual futures and ETFs in a trading hall.

If Coinbase's regulated perp product pulls volume from Hyperliquid's offshore base, particularly from non-US traders who now have a regulated alternative, the 70% market share figure starts compressing toward whatever share an unregulated offshore venue can hold against domestic competitors.

ETF flows compound that risk asymmetrically, since BHYP and THYP absorbed $136 million in 13 sessions after a vertical move, and institutional inflows at the top of a momentum cycle reverse faster than they accumulate.

Grayscale's expansion into tokenized equities, commodities, and pre-IPO markets through HIP-3 and HIP-4 raises a separate set of regulatory questions around commodities exposure and equity-like prediction contracts that US regulators have not yet addressed directly, and HYPE prices successful execution across all of those verticals simultaneously.

The bull case rests on the $86 trillion in annual perp volume running entirely offshore before May 29, and the dominant venue in a newly legitimized market typically absorbs the first wave of institutional expansion rather than losing to it.

Hyperliquid's buyback model, which directs nearly 99% of protocol revenue toward daily open-market HYPE purchases, converts volume growth directly into supply compression, and three ETF products competing for the same concentrated float amplify that mechanism further.

Scenario What has to happen HYPE read-through
Bull case: market expands U.S.-regulated perps grow the overall market, while Hyperliquid keeps execution quality and offshore dominance HYPE trades as the leading proxy for 24/7 derivatives infrastructure
Base case: ETF demand sustains BHYP, THYP, and possible future products keep absorbing float while protocol buybacks continue ATH consolidates into a higher valuation range
Bear case: competitors compress the moat Coinbase and Kalshi take meaningful perp share, especially from non-U.S. traders seeking regulated venues HYPE reprices from infrastructure leader back toward high-beta DEX token
Regulatory risk case Tokenized equities, commodities, or pre-IPO perps attract direct scrutiny Expansion narrative gets discounted
Flow reversal case ETF inflows reverse after the vertical move Institutional access becomes a volatility amplifier instead of a support base

The Hyperliquid HYPE rally now rests on the argument that Hyperliquid derivatives infrastructure has crossed from a venue crypto traders use to an asset institutional allocators can own, regulated competitors must study, and exchange incumbents openly benchmark against.

Whether the fundamentals justify that repricing depends entirely on whether regulated US perps expand the market Hyperliquid dominates, or slowly displace it.

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