WikiBit 2026-06-27 18:02Hyperliquid (@HyperliquidX) is a decentralized exchange built on its own Layer 1 blockchain, and $HY
That last part is why the token gets so much attention. And now there is a second way to hold it. US spot $HYPE ETFs went live in May 2026, bringing regulated money into a token that, until recently, you could only get on-chain.
Here is how the token works, and where the new ETFs stand.
What is Hyperliquid?
Hyperliquid is the largest on-chain venue for perpetual futures trading. It launched in 2023, and its core engine, HyperCore, runs fully on-chain perps and spot order books with sub-second finality and high throughput. Many trading actions incur low or zero gas fees, and the platform supports up to 40x leverage.
The $HYPE token launched on November 29, 2024, as part of one of the largest airdrops in crypto. HyperEVM, an Ethereum-compatible layer that lets developers build apps and smart contracts on the same chain, followed in February 2025. That opened the door to products like tokenized real-world assets and synthetics, and it is where $HYPE pays gas.
The project leans on a community-first setup. There were no venture capital backers at launch, no paid market makers and no fees routed to a central company. Trades, funding, and liquidations all settle on-chain, where anyone can check them.
What does $HYPE actually do?
The token's uses are direct and easy to follow:
None of this is flashy, but it creates steady demand from the people who use the platform: traders, builders and stakers.
How the buyback and burn works
This is the part that sets $HYPE apart from most tokens.
Hyperliquid charges trading fees on its perps and spot markets, and nearly all of the revenue the protocol keeps flows directly back to $HYPE holders. DefiLlama data shows the platform has collected $1.383 billion in fees since launch, with $1.18 billion of that booked as protocol revenue, essentially all of which is routed to holders rather than to a company or its insiders.
The route is the Assistance Fund, which takes that revenue, buys $HYPE on the open market through transparent on-chain orders and sends the tokens to a burn address. More trading means more fees, which means more buybacks and burns. It works like an automated share buyback, tied directly to platform activity. Over the past 30 days alone the protocol booked $80.99 million in fees.
$HYPE launched with a genesis supply of 1 billion tokens. In December 2025, the Hyper Foundation pushed a validator vote to formally count the Assistance Fund's accumulated $HYPE as burned, wiping it from both circulating and total supply rather than just parking it out of reach. CoinMarketCap now lists both total and max supply at 953.67 million $HYPE. That difference, roughly 46 million tokens, is what the buyback program has burned so far.
$HYPE by the numbers
As of June 26, 2026, $HYPE traded near $62.72, down 1.17% on the day and down 6.02% on the week. The token ranks ninth by market cap at $15.87 billion. Fully diluted valuation sits at $59.81 billion.
Circulating supply is 253.03 million $HYPE, about 27% of the max supply, so a large share of tokens is still locked under vesting schedules tied mostly to emissions and community rewards. The next unlock, a Core Contributor release, is due in early July.
What about the US spot ETFs?
US spot $HYPE ETFs arrived in May 2026, giving investors a regulated, brokerage-friendly way to hold the token without managing custody themselves. Three products lead the group, and all three stake at least part of their holdings:
The launch went well at first. Weekly inflows peaked in late May, with $72.38 million in the week ending May 22 and $57.19 million the following week. Since then the pace has cooled. The week ending June 24 brought just $1.46 million.
On June 25, the three funds combined for a net outflow of $4.64 million, the worst day since listing. Bitwise's BHYP lost $2.82 million and 21Shares' THYP lost $1.82 million, while Grayscale's HYPG saw no flow.
Cumulative net inflows since launch sit at $179.38 million, and the funds hold $200.59 million in net assets. That is about 1.36% of $HYPE's market cap.
The ETFs hold about $200 million in $HYPE. The Assistance Fund has routed $1.18 billion in protocol revenue into $HYPE buybacks over the platform's lifetime, roughly six times the ETF total. For now the on-chain mechanism is the bigger force on supply, and the ETFs are the newer, smaller test of how much institutional money wants in.
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