Changpeng Zhao praised Hyperliquid's innovation on the Galaxy Brains podcast, then warned the protocol faces legal risks from operating without KYC.
Changpeng Zhao praised Hyperliquid's innovation on the Galaxy Brains podcast, then warned the protocol faces legal risks from operating without KYC.

Changpeng Zhao called Hyperliquid's model "awesome" on the Galaxy Brains podcast this week, then warned the decentralized exchange needs strong legal representation — a caution from someone who served 4 months in US federal prison for compliance failures.
"They don't have KYC. They claim they're decentralized… I would never do what they do, given what I've experienced," Zhao, the founder of Binance, said on the podcast. "I assume they have good lawyers."
HYPE, Hyperliquid's native token, hit a record $76.70 on June 16, up more than 10% on the day. Spot HYPE exchange-traded funds have pulled in about $172 million in their first month of trading, with analyst price targets ranging from $83 to $98 and a longer-term $300 case gaining traction among some investors.
Zhao's warning carries weight because he pleaded guilty in November 2023 to anti-money laundering violations tied to Binance's failure to maintain adequate KYC controls. The exchange paid more than $4.3 billion to resolve US allegations. Hyperliquid operates without identity verification, positioning itself as a decentralized protocol beyond the reach of traditional financial regulation — a stance that has drawn scrutiny as similar platforms face enforcement actions.
Zhao's comments come from direct experience. His 2023 plea deal with the US Department of Justice acknowledged that Binance processed transactions for users in sanctioned jurisdictions and failed to run adequate KYC controls. He served 4 months in federal prison before receiving a pardon from President Trump in October 2025.
The competitive history between Zhao and Hyperliquid sharpens the remark: Binance has not listed HYPE, and Zhao has backed Aster, a rival decentralized exchange platform that initially operated on BNB Chain.
Hyperliquid demonstrated its market reach during the SpaceX IPO, the largest in Wall Street history. While Bybit, Binance and Bitget canceled their tokenized SpaceX products after failing to source enough real shares, Hyperliquid had already built functioning pre-IPO price discovery using synthetic perpetual futures. The platform cleared $1.4 billion in SPCX volume on IPO day without holding a single real share.
The Hyper Foundation has funded the Hyperliquid Policy Center with $28 million worth of HYPE tokens to advocate for a regulated US path to on-chain derivatives markets, an acknowledgment of the compliance questions surrounding its model.
Hyperliquid is not alone in facing questions about KYC compliance. KuCoin pleaded guilty in January 2025 to operating an unlicensed money-transmitting business and agreed to pay nearly $300 million in fines. BitMEX was fined $100 million for willfully violating the Bank Secrecy Act by operating without proper identity checks.
The pattern suggests that while blockchain-based trading platforms can replicate centralized exchange functionality under the banner of decentralization, regulators have multiple points of leverage — including control over transaction sequencers, stablecoin issuers and fiat on-ramps.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.