🚹 JUST IN: Crypto AI Agent is here!!! Watch the video đŸŽ„

Deutschí•œê”­ì–Žæ—„æœŹèȘžäž­æ–‡EspañolFrançaisŐ€ŐĄŐ”Ő„Ö€Ő„Ő¶NederlandsРуссĐșĐžĐčItalianoPortuguĂȘsTĂŒrkçePortfolio TrackerSwapCryptocurrenciesPricingOpen APIIntegrationsNewsEarnBlogNFTWidgetsDeFi Portfolio TrackerCrypto Gaming24h ReportPress KitAPI Docs
CoinStats

Hyperliquid Pushes Back As CME And ICE Raise Oil Market Concerns

1h ago‱
bullish:

0

bearish:

0

Hyperliquid Review 2026: Full Ecosystem Breakdown, Fees, HYPE And Risks
Hyperliquid Review 2026: Full Ecosystem Breakdown, Fees, HYPE And Risks

Hyperliquid is pushing back after CME Group and Intercontinental Exchange pressed U.S. regulators to scrutinize the fast-growing onchain derivatives platform over market manipulation, oil pricing, and sanctions-risk concerns.

A Hyperliquid-linked response argued that the concerns are unfounded, pointing to the platform’s fully onchain record as a transparency advantage rather than a market-integrity weakness. The response comes after Bloomberg reported that CME and ICE were urging the CFTC and lawmakers to rein in Hyperliquid, warning that anonymous 24/7 trading could affect global oil price discovery and create room for manipulation or sanctions evasion.

The pressure puts one of DeFi’s fastest-growing trading platforms directly against two of the world’s largest regulated derivatives operators. Hyperliquid has grown from a crypto-native perpetuals exchange into a broader onchain market structure experiment, with crypto, commodities, equities-style exposure, and HyperEVM applications building around the same liquidity base.

Recent Hyperliquid market coverage already showed why incumbents are paying attention. Hyperliquid is no longer a small DeFi exchange sitting outside mainstream market structure. Its order books, open interest, and commodity-linked markets are now large enough to trigger a regulatory fight over who gets to run always-open derivatives markets.

Onchain Transparency Becomes The Defense

Hyperliquid’s main defense is that every transaction, order, trade, liquidation, and position update can be monitored onchain. That transparency is different from traditional exchange surveillance, where regulators and operators rely on internal records, member reporting, audit trails, and post-trade supervision.

The platform’s supporters argue that public execution data can make insider trading, manipulation, and suspicious flows easier to detect. Critics counter that transparent data does not automatically solve identity, jurisdiction, KYC, sanctions-screening, or market-abuse enforcement if traders remain pseudonymous and the platform operates outside the standard U.S. registration framework.

That distinction is the center of the fight. DeFiLlama data places Hyperliquid near $3.9 billion in 24-hour perp volume, about $8.8 billion in open interest, more than $5.1 billion in TVL, and more than $5.5 billion in stablecoins on Hyperliquid L1. Those numbers explain why regulators and incumbents are now treating Hyperliquid as market infrastructure rather than a niche crypto app.

Hyperliquid’s own growth has also made risk concentration harder to ignore. Recent perp DEX data showed liquidity clustering heavily around Hyperliquid, with the platform leading decentralized perpetuals by open interest and reported volume.

CFTC Path Becomes The Next Battleground

The regulatory question now moves to the CFTC and Congress. CME and ICE appear to want Hyperliquid pulled closer to existing derivatives rules, including registration, surveillance, and customer-identification requirements. Hyperliquid’s policy arm wants a framework that recognizes onchain derivatives without forcing decentralized infrastructure into rules built for centralized exchanges.

The timing overlaps with the wider U.S. market-structure debate. The CLARITY Act is already pushing lawmakers to define SEC and CFTC lanes for digital assets, DeFi activity, intermediaries, and trading platforms. Hyperliquid’s fight with CME and ICE gives that debate a live market test rather than a theoretical policy argument.

The next concrete signals will come from CFTC engagement, congressional responses, Hyperliquid Policy Center filings or meetings, and whether CME and ICE keep pressing for formal registration. Hyperliquid’s scale has made the question unavoidable: can onchain derivatives become regulated U.S. market infrastructure without losing the transparency, speed, and permissionless access that made the platform grow in the first place?

The post Hyperliquid Pushes Back As CME And ICE Raise Oil Market Concerns appeared first on Crypto Adventure.

1h ago‱
bullish:

0

bearish:

0

Manage all your crypto, NFT and DeFi from one place

Securely connect the portfolio you’re using to start.