Two things can be true at once in crypto markets. A sector can cool down overall, and still become more important in a narrower set of places. That is what the latest onchain trading data suggests.
The broad perp DEX market has been losing momentum for months, but Hyperliquid is still pulling in attention by expanding what traders can do there.
Stay ahead in the crypto world – follow us on X for the latest updates, insights, and trends!🚀
The broad slowdown
Crypto media reported that onchain perpetual futures volumes have now fallen for five straight months since their October 2025 peak. Monthly perp DEX volume dropped to $699 billion in March 2026 from $1.36 trillion in October.
Daily volume also slipped to $8.4 billion on April 4, the first sub-$10 billion reading since September and the lowest since July 2025.
At first glance, that looks like a simple slowdown. A bear market thing. But the deeper story is more selective than that.
The same reports said trading activity remains concentrated in the biggest venues, with Hyperliquid posting about $185.5 billion in 30-day volume, or roughly 34% of total volume among the top 10 perp DEXs. That suggests the market is rewarding the platforms that still give traders a reason to show up, not just shrinking.
Hyperliquid’s product expansion
That is where the Hyperliquid’s progress matters. Open interest in Hyperliquid‘s HIP-3 markets, which offer perpetual futures tied to traditional assets, climbed above $2.3 billion.
Oil had earlier dominated the category, but newer activity broadened out, with equity-linked markets such as S&P 500 and XYZ100 contracts adding about $500 million in open interest.
In plain language, this means onchain venues may no longer win just by being onchain perp exchanges. That was a winning strategy years ago, but not today.
RWA trading on Hyperliquid continues to reach new ATHs week after week, surpassing $2.3B in open interest pic.twitter.com/R9uDCAx3fo
— Hyperliquid (@HyperliquidX) April 6, 2026
They may need to keep expanding the product surface. If traders can get crypto exposure, macro-style exposure, and tradfi-referenced perpetuals in one place, that venue becomes harder to ignore. And it shows.
That last point is the overlap between the volume concentration and the growth in Hyperliquid’s RWA-style open interest, but it fits the direction of the data.
What this means for traders
This helps answer a common question: is onchain trading fading, or just changing shape? The better answer may be that it is consolidating.
Liquidity appears to be moving toward the venues that keep finding new reasons to matter, while weaker or less distinctive platforms struggle to hold share.
That could create ripple effects of even tighter liquidity concentration around a few dominant venues.
And onchain trading may start looking less like a crypto-only corner of the market and more like a place where traders follow the same macro and tradfi price action they would chase elsewhere, just through a different access layer.
That is still a not-so-certain shift, but Hyperliquid’s current traction points in that exact direction.
Cryptocurrency and Web3 expert, founder of Kriptoworld
LinkedIn | X (Twitter) | More articles
With years of experience covering the blockchain space, András delivers insightful reporting on DeFi, tokenization, altcoins, and crypto regulations shaping the digital economy.
📅 Published: April 7, 2026 • 🕓 Last updated: April 7, 2026
✉️ Contact: [email protected]
Disclosure:This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.
Kriptoworld.com accepts no liability for any errors in the articles or for any financial loss resulting from incorrect information.

