Traders on Hyperliquid, the onchain exchange that settles the largest share of crypto perpetual futures volume, are trading more money through builder-deployed markets for stocks, commodities and indices than through the platform's native crypto contracts.

Those builder markets, deployed under Hyperliquid's HIP-3 framework, generated $5.41 billion in notional volume, or 51.8% of the $10.44 billion traded across the exchange, according to data from Hyperliquid's API queried by The Defiant on Tuesday. Native crypto perps, led by Bitcoin at $2.69 billion and Ether at $1.27 billion, accounted for the other $5.03 billion.

Builder markets first outtraded native crypto over a full trading day on July 8, when they took 54.6% of volume, and repeated it on July 9 and July 10, according to a Defiant analysis of daily Hyperliquid market data. The pattern is confined to weekdays.

On July 5, 11 and 12, all weekend days, builder markets fell back to between 16% and 33% of volume as trading in stocks, commodities and indices thinned while crypto kept turning over.

Builder-market share of Hyperliquid volume climbed from near zero at HIP-3's launch to above 50% for the first time on July 8. Source: The Defiant analysis of Hyperliquid market data.

Growing Shift

The shift has been building for months. Builder-market share climbed from a fraction of a percent when HIP-3 launched in October to roughly a third through the spring, peaking just under parity on single days in April and June before clearing 50% this month.

Show ImageBuilder-market share of Hyperliquid volume climbed from near zero at HIP-3's launch to above 50% for the first time on July 8. Source: The Defiant analysis of Hyperliquid market data.

The crossover shows how far Hyperliquid has moved from its origins as a crypto derivatives venue toward a round-the-clock market for a wider range of assets. It feeds a thesis argued by firms including Grayscale that the exchange's long-term value lies less in its $HYPE token than in its potential to serve as a 24/7 trading layer for equities, commodities and other instruments that traditional venues close each night and weekend.

The shift drew attention on Tuesday after a trader posting as @ryandcrypto wrote that "people are officially trading more stocks than crypto on hyperliquid," alongside a chart of the two volumes. The exchange's own data supports only a narrower version of the claim: builder markets as a group have topped crypto on recent weekdays, but not for the first time on Tuesday, and single-name stocks on their own have not.

'Stocks' Overstates It

Single-name equity perps drew $3.2 billion over the 24-hour window, still below crypto's $5.03 billion. The builder-market total clears crypto only once commodities and index perps are added. Crude oil, Brent and silver contracts together traded about $1.42 billion, and index perps tracking the Nasdaq-100 and S&P 500 added roughly $686 million.

Equity volume is also heavily concentrated. Perps on SK Hynix, the South Korean memory-chip maker, alone accounted for $1.62 billion, or roughly half of all single-stock volume. A cluster of related semiconductor and memory names followed, including Micron, SanDisk and Samsung, alongside a market tracking DRAM chip prices. Strip out SK Hynix, and stock volume falls to less than a third of crypto's.

Stocks trading on Hyperliquid still lower than crypto. Source: The Defiant analysis of Hyperliquid market data.

One Builder Runs the Show

HIP-3 lets outside teams launch their own perpetual markets on Hyperliquid's infrastructure by staking 500,000 $HYPE, worth about $32 million at current prices. The framework went live on Oct. 13, 2025. One builder, trade.xyz, dominates it, and on Tuesday accounted for all but a fraction of the $5.41 billion in builder-market volume through the equity, commodity and index perps it operates.

HIP-3's share of Hyperliquid activity has climbed from a small slice at the start of the year to roughly half now, according to exchange data. Hyperliquid settles an estimated 70% of all onchain perpetual futures volume and ranks as one of the largest fee-generating protocols in crypto, with an annualized revenue run rate near $840 million.

$HYPE rose 1.7% over the past 24 hours, lagging a 3.6% gain in Bitcoin, according to data from CoinGecko. The token trades around a $14.4 billion market cap and is down about 10% over the past week.