温馨提示:本站仅提供公开网络链接索引服务,不存储、不篡改任何第三方内容,所有内容版权归原作者所有
AI智能索引来源:http://www.bee.com/zh_cn/63010.html
点击访问原文链接

Hyperliquid at a crossroads: Follow Robinhood or continue the Nasdaq economic paradigm? | Bee Network

Hyperliquid at a crossroads: Follow Robinhood or continue the Nasdaq economic paradigm? | Bee Network Login 热门新闻 备忘录启动板 人工智能代理 德西 TopChainExplorer 给 Newbee 100 倍金币 蜜蜂游戏 重要网站 必备应用程序 加密货币名人 德平 新手必备 陷阱探测器 基本工具 高级网站 交流 NFT 工具 你好、, 签出 Web3 宇宙 游戏 DApp 蜂巢 成长平台 生态 搜索 英语 充值金币 登录 下载 Web3 大学 游戏 DApp 蜂巢 生态 分析•Hyperliquid at a crossroads: Follow Robinhood or continue the Nasdaq economic paradigm? Hyperliquid at a crossroads: Follow Robinhood or continue the Nasdaq economic paradigm?分析2 个月前更新怀亚特 17,016 Original translation by: Saoirse, Foresight News

Hyperliquid’s perpetual contract liquidation volume has reached Nasdaq levels, but its economic benefits have not matched this. In the past 30 days, the platform liquidated perpetual contracts with a notional value of $205.6 billion (an annualized value of $617 billion on a quarterly basis), but its fee revenue was only $80.3 million, with a fee rate of approximately 3.9 basis points.

Its profit model is similar to that of a “wholesale trading venue”.

In comparison, Coinbase reported a trading volume of $295 billion and trading revenue of $1.046 billion in Q3 2025, with an implied fee rate of 35.5 basis points. Robinhood exhibits a similar “retail-style profit model” in its 加密currency business: $80 billion in nominal cryptocurrency trading volume generated $268 million in cryptocurrency trading revenue, with an implied fee rate of 33.5 basis points; meanwhile, the platform’s nominal stock trading volume in Q3 2025 was $647 billion.

The difference between the two lies not only in fee rates—retail platforms have more diversified revenue streams. In the third quarter of 2025, Robinhood’s transaction-related revenue was $730 million, in addition to $456 million in net interest income and $88 million in other revenue (primarily from its Gold subscription service). In contrast, Hyperliquid still relies heavily on transaction fees, and at the protocol level, its fee rates have consistently remained at single-digit basis points.

This difference essentially stems from their different positioning: Coinbase and Robinhood are “brokerage/distributor companies,” generating profits through their balance sheets and subscription services; while Hyperliquid is closer to the “exchange level.” In traditional market structures, profit pools are distributed at these two levels.

The Difference Between Brokerage and 交流 Models The core difference in traditional finance (TradFi) lies in the separation of the “distribution layer” and the “market layer.” Retail platforms such as Robinhood and Coinbase occupy the “distribution layer,” which occupies the high-margin area; while exchanges such as Nasdaq occupy the “market layer”—at this level, pricing power is structurally limited, and competition in the transaction execution process is gradually trending towards a “commoditized economic model” (i.e., profit margins are significantly compressed).

1. Brokerage firm = Distribution + Client balance sheet

Brokerage firms control client relationships. Most users don’t directly access NASDAQ but instead enter the market through a broker: the broker handles account opening, asset custody, margin/risk management, client support, and tax documentation, before routing orders to the specific trading venue. This “client relationship ownership” creates profit opportunities beyond trading itself.

Related to cash balance: cash collection interest rate spread, margin trading interest, securities lending income; Service packages: subscription services, bundled products, bank card services/consulting services; Order routing economics: Brokers control transaction flow and can embed payment sharing or revenue-sharing mechanisms in the routing chain. This is the core reason why brokers can profit more than trading venues: the profit pool is concentrated on the “distribution end” and the “fund balance end”.

2. An exchange consists of order matching, a rules system, and infrastructure; its transaction fee rate is subject to a cap.

Exchanges operate trading venues, and their core functions include order matching, setting market rules, ensuring deterministic execution, and providing trading connectivity. Their revenue sources include:

Transaction fees (in highly liquid products, fees are continuously driven down due to competition). Rebate/Liquidity Incentive Programs (to attract liquidity, a large portion of the public transaction fees are often returned to market makers); 市场 data services, transaction connectivity/server hosting services; Listing services and index licensing fees. Robinhood’s order routing model clearly illustrates this architecture: the broker (Robinhood Securities) controls users and routes orders to third-party marketplace centers, with revenue from the routing process shared throughout the chain. The “distribution layer” is the high-margin segment—it controls user acquisition and develops diverse revenue streams around trade execution (such as order flow fees, financing, securities lending, and subscription services).

Nasdaq belongs to the “low-margin tier”: its core products are “commoditized trade execution” and “order queue access rights”. Its pricing power is subject to three constraints in terms of mechanism – it needs to return commissions to market makers in order to attract liquidity, regulators set a cap on access fees, and order routing is highly flexible (users can easily switch to other platforms).

Data disclosed by Nasdaq shows that its stock business has an “implied net cash gain” of only $0.001 per share (i.e., one-thousandth of a dollar per share).

The strategic impact of low profit margins is also reflected in Nasdaq’s revenue structure: In 2024, “market services” revenue was $1.02 billion, accounting for only 22% of total revenue of $4.649 billion; while this proportion was 39.4% in 2014 and 35% in 2019 – this trend indicates that Nasdaq is gradually shifting from “execution business that relies on market transactions” to “more sustainable software/data business”.

Hyperliquid, positioned at the “market level” Hyperliquid’s actual fee rate of 4 basis points aligns with its strategy of “proactively choosing its market layer positioning.” The platform is building an “on-chain Nasdaq”: through a high-throughput order matching, margin calculation, and clearing technology stack (HyperCore), it adopts a “market maker/taker” pricing model and provides market maker rebates—its core optimization direction is “trade execution quality” and “liquidity sharing,” rather than “retail user profitability.”

This positioning is reflected in the separation of two “traditional financial” aspects, a design that most cryptocurrency trading platforms do not adopt:

1. Unlicensed Brokers/Distributors (Builder Codes)

“Builder Codes” allows third-party interfaces to connect to core trading venues and set their own fee structures. The third-party transaction fee cap for perpetual contracts is 0.1% (10 basis points), while the fee for spot trading is 1%, and fees can be set individually for each order—this design creates a “competitive distribution market” rather than a “monopoly by a single app.”

2. Unlicensed Market Launch/Product Tier (HIP-3)

In traditional finance, exchanges control listing authority and product creation rights; HIP-3 externalizes this function: developers can deploy perpetual contracts based on the HyperCore technology stack and APIs, and independently 定义ne and operate trading markets. From an economic perspective, HIP-3 formally establishes a “revenue-sharing mechanism between trading venues and product providers”—the deployers of spot and HIP-3 perpetual contracts can receive 50% of the transaction fees for the deployed assets.

“Builder Codes” has already proven effective in distribution: as of mid-December, about one-third of users were transacting through third-party front-ends rather than the official interface.

However, this structure also puts predictable pressure on the transaction fee revenue of trading venues:

Pricing compression: Multiple front-ends share the same back-end liquidity, and competition forces the “overall cost” to be reduced to the lowest level; moreover, transaction fees can be adjusted according to orders, further pushing pricing closer to the bottom line; Loss of profit channels: The front end controls the user account opening, service packaging, subscription and trading process, occupying the high gross profit margin of the “broker layer”, while Hyperliquid only retains the low gross profit of the “trading venue layer”; Strategic routing risk: If the front end develops into a “cross-platform order routing provider”, Hyperliquid will be forced into “wholesale execution competition” – and will need to reduce fees or increase rebates to maintain transaction traffic. Hyperliquid has proactively chosen a “low-margin market tier” positioning through HIP-3 and Builder Codes, while allowing a “high-margin broker tier” to form above it. If the front end continues to expand, these brokers will gradually control “user-side pricing,” “user retention channels,” and “routing power,” which will put structural pressure on Hyperliquid’s commission rates in the long run.

Defend distribution rights and expand non-exchange profit pool Hyperliquid’s core risk is the “commoditization trap”: if third-party front-ends can continue to attract users at prices lower than the official interface and eventually achieve “cross-platform routing”, the platform will be forced to shift to a “wholesale execution economy model” (i.e., continuously narrowing profit margins).

Judging from recent design adjustments, Hyperliquid is trying to avoid this outcome while broadening its revenue streams beyond transaction fees.

1. Distribution Defense: Maintaining the economic competitiveness of the official interface.

Previously, Hyperliquid proposed a “up to 40% discount on transaction fees for staking HYPE tokens”—a design that would have structurally made it feasible for third-party front-ends to offer “lower prices than the official interface.” With the cancellation of this proposal, external distribution channels lost the direct subsidy of “pricing lower than the official interface.” Meanwhile, the HIP-3 marketplace, initially only distributed through “developer distribution” and not displayed on the official front-end, has now been included in the official front-end’s “strict list.” This series of actions sends a clear signal: Hyperliquid retains permissionless characteristics at the “developer level” but is unwilling to compromise on “core distribution rights.”

2. Stablecoin USDH: Shifting from “Trading Profits” to “Liquidity Pool Profits”

The core purpose of launching USDH is to reclaim the “stablecoin reserve revenue” that was originally flowing out. According to the public mechanism, 50% of the reserve revenue is allocated to Hyperliquid, and 50% is used for the development of the USDH ecosystem. In addition, the design of “USDH trading market enjoying transaction fee discounts” further strengthens this logic: Hyperliquid is willing to exchange “compressed profit per transaction” for “larger and more stable liquidity pool profits” – essentially adding a “similar annuity income stream”, the growth of which can rely on the “currency base” (rather than solely on trading volume).

3. Portfolio Margin: Introducing “Institutional Brokerage Financing Economy”

The “combined margin” mechanism unifies the margin calculation for spot and perpetual contracts, allowing for risk exposure hedging while introducing a “native lending cycle.” Hyperliquid charges “10% of the borrower’s interest”—this design gradually links the protocol’s economic model to “leverage utilization” and “interest rates,” making it closer to the profit logic of “brokers/institutional brokers” rather than a pure exchange model.

Hyperliquid’s Path Towards a Brokerage Economy Model Hyperliquid’s trading volume has reached the level of “mainstream exchanges,” but its profit model remains at the “market level”: nominal trading volume is huge, but the actual transaction fee rate is only a single-digit basis point. The gap with Coinbase and Robinhood is structural: retail platforms are at the “broker level,” controlling user relationships and fund balances, and achieving high gross margins through diversified profit pools such as “financing, idle funds, and subscriptions”; pure exchanges, on the other hand, take “trade execution as their core product,” and due to liquidity competition and routing flexibility, “trade execution” will inevitably become commoditized, and profit margins will be continuously squeezed—Nasdaq is a typical example of this constraint in traditional finance.

Hyperliquid initially aligned deeply with the “exchange marketplace prototype”: by separating “distribution (Builder Codes)” from “product creation (HIP-3),” it rapidly drove ecosystem expansion and market coverage. However, this architecture came at the cost of “economic spillover”: if third-party front-ends controlled “overall pricing” and “cross-platform routing rights,” Hyperliquid would face the risk of “becoming a wholesale channel, clearing transaction traffic with low profit margins.”

However, recent actions indicate that the platform is consciously shifting towards “defending distribution rights” and “broadening its revenue structure” (no longer relying on transaction fees). For example, it has stopped subsidizing “external front-end price competition,” incorporated the HIP-3 market into its official front-end, and added a “balance sheet-style profit pool.” The launch of USDH is a typical example of incorporating “reserve returns” into the ecosystem (including a 50% commission and fee discounts); the portfolio margin introduces a “financing economy” by “charging 10% interest to borrowers.”

Currently, Hyperliquid is gradually moving towards a “hybrid model”: based on a “trade execution channel,” it is combined with “distribution defense” and a “profit pool driven by a liquidity pool.” This transformation reduces the risk of “falling into the wholesale low-margin trap” while moving closer to a “brokerage-style revenue structure” without abandoning its core advantages of “unified execution and clearing.”

Looking ahead to 2026, Hyperliquid’s core challenge is how to move towards a “brokerage-style economy” without disrupting its “outsourcing-friendly model.” USDH serves as the most direct test case—its current supply is approximately $100 million, demonstrating that without platform control over distribution, the expansion of “outsourced issuance” will be extremely slow. A more obvious alternative would be a “default setting on the official interface,” such as automatically converting the approximately $4 billion USDC base into a native stablecoin (similar to Binance’s automatic conversion of USDC to BUSD).

If Hyperliquid wants to acquire a “broker-grade profit pool,” it must take “broker-style actions”: strengthen control, deepen the integration of its own products and official interfaces, and clarify the boundaries with the ecosystem team (to avoid internal friction over “distribution rights” and “fund balances”).

本文来源于互联网: Hyperliquid at a crossroads: Follow Robinhood or continue the Nasdaq economic paradigm?

Related: Giants halt their buying, ETFs cool down: What’s the real reason behind Bitcoin’s recent decline? Original author: Oluwapelumi Adejumo Original translation by Luffy, Foresight News For most of 2025, Bitcoin’s support level seemed unshakeable because the unexpected alliance between Enterprise Digital Assets (DAT) and Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) formed the basis of this support. Corporate purchases of Bitcoin through the issuance of stocks and convertible bonds, while ETF inflows quietly absorb new supply. Together, these factors have created a solid demand base, helping Bitcoin withstand the pressure of tightening financial conditions. Now, this foundation is beginning to crumble. On November 3, Charles Edwards, founder of Capriole Investments, posted on the X platform that his bullish expectations have weakened as institutional buying has slowed. He pointed out: “For the first time in seven months, institutional net buying has fallen below the daily mining supply, which is…

#分析# 加密# 定义# 交易所# 市场# 市场# 代币© 版权声明文章版权归作者所有,未经允许请勿转载。 上一篇 CZ's Latest AMA: Keep Building is the Only Path Through Cycles 下一篇 Five cryptocurrencies defied market trends and surged; which one is the next potential winner? 相关文章 Hyperliquid airdrop project ratings: Which ones are worth buying?Recommended Articles 6086cf14eb90bc67ca4fc62b 21,108 1 Hyperliquid ecosystem is booming: Hypurr, a pump platform that allows users to quickly access content 6086cf14eb90bc67ca4fc62b 43,642 2 Trivia: The first DApp on Ethereum was a prediction market 6086cf14eb90bc67ca4fc62b 17,570 1 Crypto Stock Barometer丨Strategy Invested $264 Million to Purchase 2,932 Bitcoins Last Week; Ethereum Treasury Company ETHZilla Spent $12.2 Million on Two Jet Engines (January 27) 6086cf14eb90bc67ca4fc62b 7,352 KernelDAO launches KERNEL token to boost the development of BNB Chain re-staking ecosystem 6086cf14eb90bc67ca4fc62b 38,301 1 BNB Chain’s journey to immortality, with both high market capitalization and on-chain popularity 6086cf14eb90bc67ca4fc62b 19,451 最新文章 UniSat Releases Phase Updates and Upgrades, Continuously Building the Bitcoin Ecosystem 6小时前 423 Jack Dorsey’s Company: 4,000 White-Collar Workers Are Being Replaced by AI 6小时前 413 Latest Stablecoin Report: Real Distribution and Flow Are Far More Important Than Supply 6小时前 336 Sui DeFi’s “Three-Engine” Revolution: How New Capabilities, New Assets, and New Programs Are Building the Future of On-Chain Finance? 6小时前 296 On-chain Investigator ZachXBT Confirms: Axiom Employees Exploited Internal Privileges for Insider Trading 6小时前 302 热门网站TempoGAIBLighter滑翔机普朗克雷尔斯BCPokerVooi Bee.com 全球最大的 Web3 门户网站 合作伙伴 硬币卡 Binance CoinMarketCap CoinGecko Coinlive 装甲 下载蜜蜂网络APP,开始web3之旅 白皮书 角色 常见问题 © 2021-2026.保留所有权利。. 隐私政策 | 服务条款 下载蜜蜂网络 APP 并开始 web3 之旅 全球最大的 Web3 门户网站 合作伙伴 CoinCarp Binance CoinMarketCap CoinGecko Coinlive Armors 白皮书 角色 常见问题 © 2021-2026.保留所有权利。. 隐私政策 | 服务条款 搜索 搜索InSite链上社会新闻 热门推荐: 空投猎人 数据分析 加密货币名人 陷阱探测器 简体中文 English 繁體中文 日本語 Tiếng Việt العربية 한국어 Bahasa Indonesia हिन्दी اردو Русский 简体中文

智能索引记录