Perpetual futures trading is moving to decentralized platforms

Perpetual futures have a lasting trend of moving to decentralized platforms. DEX trading share has been growing in the past year, driven by rising volumes and a growing diversity of markets. 

Perpetual futures trading is shifting to decentralized markets, building new liquidity over the past years. The perpetual futures DEXs picked up in the past two years, but did not start grabbing share from CEXs until 2025. Before that, perp DEX platforms were niche and obscured by other crypto trends. 

Perpetual futures DEX activity expanded to a higher baseline in the past year, staging a recovery from its lows in early 2026. | Source: DeFiLlama.

Based on CoinGecko data, decentralized perpetual futures trading takes up 10.22% of the market, with the rest of the trading still happening on centralized markets. However, the past few months showed that the pace of growth was accelerating. In January, the share of perpetual futures DEXs increased to 13.66% of centralized activity.

Are perpetual futures DEXs a threat to centralized markets?

Perpetual futures DEXs showed they could maintain a streak of elevated trading volumes, not incentivized just by airdrops or point farming. 

For now, even Hyperliquid lags behind Binance, but the exchange has moved ahead of more niche markets. Hyperliquid and other perpetual futures DEXs are a way to list new tokens. Even MEXC and Gate have not been able to list all the newly minted assets, while Hyperliquid allows for market creation and liquidity building by third parties. 

Hyperliquid is also leading in the creation of on-chain markets for traditional stocks and commodities. On the HIP-3 protocol, traders could access new oil futures contracts within days of oil’s run above $90. HIP-3 also taps the creators of third-party platforms, also drawing in liquidity for new types of futures. 

The main feature of perpetual futures DEXs is the lack of KYC. Hyperliquid does not require verification and just filters some territories based on IP address. The company still announced its dedication to privacy and no-KYC trading. Additionally, Hyperliquid has no authority to hold user funds and cannot prevent withdrawals. 

As of March 2026, Hyperliquid is the leading chain carrying perpetual futures trading, with $10B in daily volumes out of a total $28B for all markets. 

Will perpetual futures markets get tokenized?

Currently, only the leading perpetual futures DEXs carry tokens. HYPE is the leading asset to reflect the performance of Hyperliquid. 

However, some of the newly created DEXs by third parties may hold token launches. The most notable one is Trade[.]xyz, the most active DEX on HIP-3. Those markets are growing both organically and through their point farming programs. 

Perpetual futures markets may continue even if other narratives fail. Those markets are agile, quickly tapping or shedding liquidity. Hyperliquid also has a group of legacy whales, whose positions also serve as market signals. The new wave of tokenization may boost HIP-3 and other liquidity pools.

Source: https://www.cryptopolitan.com/perpetual-futures-trading-decentralized/