Hyperliquid volume jumps but TradFi still rules commodity depth

Hyperliquid volume jumps but TradFi still rules commodity depth

Onchain commodity trading is drawing more attention as traders look for round-the-clock access to oil, gold, and index products. 

Summary
  • Hyperliquid recorded $5.4 billion in macro perpetual volume as silver, oil, gold and indices led.
  • Weekend access kept onchain markets open while traditional commodity venues stayed closed to active traders.
  • Thin liquidity and wider spreads still keep onchain commodity trading below institutional size and execution.

Recent volume data shows that demand is rising, but limited liquidity still keeps traditional markets ahead in scale and execution.

Hyperliquid’s HIP-3 market reached a new record on March 23. The platform posted about $5.4 billion in perpetual futures volume across commodities and macro assets. Silver led activity with $1.3 billion, while WTI crude oil reached $1.2 billion. Brent crude oil recorded $940 million, and gold posted $558 million.

The rise in volume points to broader interest in onchain macro trading. Equity indices such as the Nasdaq and S&P 500 also drew activity. This shows that traders are using decentralized markets for more than crypto-linked positions.

Weekend access gives onchain venues a clear use case

One of the main strengths of onchain trading is constant market access. Traditional exchanges close for part of the weekend, but decentralized platforms remain open. That gap gives traders a way to respond to geopolitical events and macro news in real time.

Theo chief investment officer Iggy Ioppe said the market is changing. He said, 

”Previously, onchain commodity futures were mostly a venue for crypto-native investors, that is no longer the whole story.” 

He also said weekend oil futures volume has moved above $1 billion per day while traditional markets remain closed.

This shift has started to shape how prices form outside normal market hours. Traders can react before legacy venues reopen. That creates a role for onchain markets during off-hours, even if most large volume still sits elsewhere.

Despite higher activity, liquidity remains a core issue. Traditional venues still offer deeper order books, tighter spreads, and better execution for large trades. That makes it harder for onchain platforms to handle institutional-sized orders without moving prices.

1inch co-founder Sergej Kunz said traditional venues still lead in liquidity and execution quality. MEXC Research chief analyst Shawn Young also said the sector remains in an early stage, with gaps in price aggregation and market structure still unresolved.

Growth continues as traders test macro exposure onchain

Market participants still expect further growth. Gold and oil have led the current push, but other asset classes may follow as traders grow more comfortable with onchain access to macro products.

Ioppe said trust in weekend pricing may support more activity over time. As more traders use these markets during off-hours, volume and open interest can grow together. That process may help onchain commodity trading expand, even while traditional markets remain the main source of depth.

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