Perpetual futures expansion beyond crypto (perps) is visible as these instruments rely on funding-rate mechanisms and do not expire, keeping prices aligned with underlying markets. In crypto, perpetual futures account for roughly 80% of global digital asset trading volumes. A market highlight is Hyperliquid’s entry into commodities: its oil-linked perpetuals notional volume rose from about $25 million to over $550 million by the third weekend, and the platform priced in roughly 80% of the subsequent West Texas Intermediate crude move before traditional exchanges reopened.
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission allowed bitcoin perpetual futures to trade on Kalshi, marking a regulatory approval for a perpetual-futures contract to be listed on a U.S. exchange. Coinbase announced plans to launch U.S. equity-index perpetual futures and to connect American customers with offshore perpetual-futures markets, outlining exchange-level product expansion beyond digital assets. TD Securities wrote, “PERPS are no longer just a crypto product. They are becoming a broader market-structure product.” These regulatory steps and platform plans together reflect developments facilitating perpetual futures trading beyond crypto into traditional and offshore markets. Reporting also linked these developments to the broader trend of perpetuals extending into commodities, equities and offshore venues.
Hyperliquid is described as the largest decentralized perpetual futures platform and offers contracts linked to commodities and private companies, including pre-IPO contracts tied to Cerebras and SpaceX. The platform’s product set extends beyond traditional digital-asset perps to commodity-linked and private-company-linked contracts. Pre-IPO perpetual futures on the platform have been used to test valuations for companies before those stocks begin trading publicly. Perpetual futures are evolving into broader market-structure products beyond just crypto.
Hyperliquid’s notional volume in oil-linked perpetual futures grew from approximately $25 million to over $550 million by the third weekend of trading, a surge that occurred within a few weekends after listing. The platform priced in about 80% of the subsequent move in West Texas Intermediate crude before the CME market reopened, indicating significant price discovery functions. Hyperliquid remained open during the U.S.-Israel-Iran conflict weekend when commodity markets were closed, providing continuity of its perpetual-futures venues during that period.
Perpetual futures are portrayed as evolving from a crypto‑specific instrument into a broader market‑structure product that extends beyond digital assets into commodities, equities and other tradable exposures. Their significance is described as reaching beyond notional volume to include active price discovery, with perpetual contract pricing reflecting market moves before traditional exchange reopenings.
Hyperliquid’s oil‑linked perpetuals saw notional volume rise from approximately $25 million to more than $550 million within a few weekends, and the platform priced in about 80% of the subsequent West Texas Intermediate crude move prior to the CME reopening. These observations highlight perpetuals’ role in continuous trading and in pre‑opening price formation when conventional markets are closed.
Perpetual futures have expanded beyond crypto into commodities and private-company contracts, using funding-rate mechanisms and no expiration to align prices with underlying markets. Platforms such as Hyperliquid have offered commodity-linked and pre-IPO contracts and have contributed to price discovery by trading continuously when traditional markets were closed. These developments illustrate perpetuals functioning as broader market-structure instruments with applications outside digital assets.


