South African crypto exchange VALR is set to launch a perpetual futures product powered by Hyperliquid’s on-chain liquidity, introducing more than 200 markets to the platform when the web version goes live on Monday, 6 July 2026.
The product routes order execution through Hyperliquid, a Layer-1 blockchain purpose-built for derivatives trading. Perpetual futures, often called “perps,” are contracts that let traders take leveraged long or short positions on an asset without an expiry date. Unlike traditional futures, they never settle, instead using periodic funding rates to keep prices anchored to the spot market. For related coverage, see Vitalik Buterin Reveals Lean Ethereum Upgrade Roadmap.
VALR said the integration lets users open and manage perpetual positions directly on its platform while Hyperliquid handles order management, execution, liquidation, margin requirements, mark prices, and funding rates on-chain. Mobile support is expected to follow shortly after the web launch. For related coverage, see Step Finance exploiter sells 261,933 SOL worth $21.4M, bridges funds to Ethereum.
“On-chain liquidity” in this context means that the order book, matching engine, and settlement all run on Hyperliquid’s blockchain rather than on VALR’s internal infrastructure. Traders interact with VALR’s front end, but the depth and pricing come from Hyperliquid’s decentralized pool of liquidity providers.
VALR described the arrangement as the first time a major regulated exchange has natively integrated an on-chain Layer-1 protocol to source liquidity for cross-asset perpetuals. That characterization has not been independently verified, and other exchanges have explored similar hybrid models in recent months, including Robinhood’s expansion into crypto trading products through acquisitions.
Why on-chain liquidity sourcing matters for execution
For traders, the key question with any perpetuals venue is liquidity depth, which determines slippage, fill speed, and the cost of entering or exiting large positions. By tapping Hyperliquid’s existing liquidity rather than bootstrapping its own order book, VALR could offer tighter spreads from day one.
Hyperliquid’s protocol supports permissionless builder-deployed perpetual markets under its HIP-3 specification, which requires deployers to stake 500,000 HYPE on mainnet and fixes the deployer fee share at 50%. All deployer transactions remain on-chain, creating a public audit trail.
VALR said it serves over 1.9 million registered users and 1,900 corporate and institutional clients worldwide. That existing user base gives the new perps product a built-in distribution channel that most DeFi-native venues lack.
The distinction between exchange branding and underlying liquidity sourcing is important. Users trade on VALR and interact with its compliance layer, but the execution and risk management infrastructure sits on Hyperliquid’s chain. This splits the trust model: VALR handles identity verification and regulatory obligations, while the protocol handles market mechanics transparently.
Regulatory positioning and market structure signal
VALR is licensed by South Africa’s Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) and holds a provisional licence from the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority. Futures trading on the platform is provided through VALR DAM Pty Ltd, a licensed Financial Services Provider and Over-the-Counter Derivatives Provider. That regulatory scaffolding is part of what differentiates this launch from purely DeFi perpetuals venues, which face increasing classification pressure from regulators globally.
The integration reflects a broader pattern in crypto market structure: centralized exchanges adopting on-chain back ends while maintaining regulated front ends. Rather than building proprietary matching engines, platforms are beginning to source execution from decentralized protocols that already have deep liquidity and transparent settlement.
HYPE, Hyperliquid’s native token, traded at $69.24 at press time, down 1.47% over the prior 24 hours, with a market cap of approximately $15.4 billion. The broader crypto market was showing caution, with the Fear & Greed Index at 23, indicating extreme fear.
Traders and institutional clients should watch for the web launch on 6 July and subsequent mobile rollout for initial volume and spread data that will indicate whether the hybrid model delivers on its liquidity promise.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.