Key Takeaways:
- Hyperliquid MAU rose 21.8% to 220.8K in five weeks through June 14.
- Its DEX perpetual market share hit 56.31%, up from 23% in January.
- The platform now captures 7.6% of total perp volume including centralized exchanges.
Key Takeaways:

Hyperliquid's monthly active users reached 220,760 in the week ending June 14, a 21.8% increase over five weeks, Artemis data show. The growth came during a period when the broader crypto market lost about $440 billion in total capitalization over 30 days and Bitcoin fell from $81,000 to a low of $59,000 on June 5.
"The divergence between Hyperliquid's user growth and the broader market contraction reflects a structural migration of perpetual contract traders from centralized platforms and competing protocols," a researcher at Artemis said. "The on-chain order book model is capturing share during a period when volatility actually increased trading opportunities."
Hyperliquid's share of decentralized perpetual exchange volume rose to 56.31% as of mid-June, compared with 23% at the start of the year, according to Artemis. The platform's share of the total perpetual contract market — including centralized exchanges — reached a record 7.6%. Trading fees generated by the platform are redirected into HYPE token buybacks, reducing circulating supply as activity increases.
The protocol's HIP-3 proposal, which allows external teams to deploy perpetual contract markets on top of Hyperliquid's infrastructure, is expanding the asset catalog beyond what the core development team can manually create. The next catalyst for trading volumes may come from the macro side: the US and Iran reached a peace agreement on June 14, with formal signing scheduled for June 19 in Switzerland and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, a development that could draw liquidity back into risk assets.
Hyperliquid's dominance in the decentralized perp sector has grown as traders migrated from platforms that struggled with liquidity fragmentation during the June downturn. The protocol's on-chain order book model, combined with the HYPE buyback mechanism, creates a feedback loop where higher trading activity reduces token supply — a structure that competing decentralized exchanges have yet to replicate at scale. Whether Hyperliquid can maintain its 56% market share as volatility normalizes and competing protocols deploy similar incentive structures will determine the next phase of competition in the sector.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.