DeFi derivatives platform Hyperliquid (HYPE) is moving directly into the U.S. regulatory arena with the launch of a Washington-based policy organization, a step that signals a broader push to establish a legal pathway for onchain perpetual futures and blockchain-native market infrastructure.
The newly formed Hyperliquid Policy Center will focus on research and advocacy aimed at shaping federal rules for decentralized finance, with a specific emphasis on perpetual derivatives, a product that dominates global crypto trading volumes but remains largely inaccessible in the United States due to regulatory constraints.
Onchain Perpetuals Enter U.S. Regulatory Debate
The creation of a dedicated 501(c)(4) policy group marks one of the clearest attempts by a decentralized trading ecosystem to engage directly in U.S. financial rulemaking.
Rather than positioning DeFi as a parallel system operating offshore, the initiative frames blockchain-based derivatives as part of the future domestic market structure.
Perpetual futures account for the majority of crypto trading activity worldwide, yet U.S. users typically access them through foreign platforms.
By building a policy presence in Washington, Hyperliquid is effectively seeking a compliant framework that would allow these products to exist within U.S. regulatory boundaries.
Token-Funded Advocacy Model Emerges
The organization is being financed with an allocation of 1 million HYPE tokens from the Hyper Foundation, introducing a new model in which blockchain ecosystems deploy native assets to support lobbying and policy development.
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That structure highlights the growing role of protocol treasuries in political and regulatory engagement, a function historically dominated by centralized exchanges, venture firms and traditional financial institutions.
DeFi Policy Effort Led By Former Industry Legal Heavyweights
The policy center will be led by Jake Chervinsky, a prominent crypto regulatory lawyer whose previous roles at Variant, the Blockchain Association and Compound placed him at the center of major U.S. digital-asset policy debates.
The hiring of senior legal and policy staff with backgrounds in securities and commodities law signals an effort to translate decentralized trading infrastructure into frameworks recognizable to federal regulators.
Market Structure Battle Shifts Toward Washington
The launch comes as Congress and federal agencies continue to debate how trading platforms, derivatives and stablecoins should be regulated.
By establishing a permanent policy operation, Hyperliquid is positioning onchain exchanges to influence that process rather than react to it.
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