Hyperliquid wants to roll out its next card in the fight against centralized institutions, #USDH .
A native, Hyperliquid-first stablecoin set to redirect billions in flows that currently bleed out to Circle and Tether.
Right now, the protocol sits on $5.5B+ in USDC deposits. That’s leaking an estimated $220M in annual yield to external issuers.
The proposal brings the stablecoin in-house, backs it with treasuries, and lets those yields flow straight into the ecosystem, mostly into $HYPE buybacks.
The validator vote on Sept 14 decides the issuer (Paxos, Frax, Agora, Native, …).
Each proposal has its flavor, but the common thread is simple: turn stablecoin seigniorage into a revenue engine for the network.
Paxos pitches 95% of yield back into HYPE buybacks. Frax pushes 100% yield on-chain. Agora leans retail with fiat ramps.
Yield no longer leaks out, it compounds back into HL.
Why’s this such a big deal?
– Adds another $190M–$220M per year in buyback fuel on top of existing fee-driven burns
– 80% fee cuts on stable/stable spot pairs roll out alongside it, pulling in deeper liquidity and more traders
– Makes HL less dependent on bridged USDC, while improving its regulatory posture (GENIUS + MiCA compliant)
– Positions USDH as the quote asset across perps, spot, and HyperEVM apps
I see this as a multi-layer catalyst:
→ DeFi is moving back toward native stables
→ HL’s TVL already at $2.5B. This could drive another leg, $10B+ isn’t unrealistic in a bull market
→ $HYPE already buys back 97% of platform fees, add another $200M+ in stablecoin yield and the deflationary curve steepens
→ No longer reliant on USDC or Circle. Native stable is tighter loops, stickier ecosystem
USDH becomes the missing piece that turns Hyperliquid into the full-stack financial system it wants to be.
$HYPE already moved ~10% just off the news, but the real upside comes if USDH spins up right.
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Hyperliquid wants to roll out its next card in the fight against centralized institutions, #USDH .
A native, Hyperliquid-first stablecoin set to redirect billions in flows that currently bleed out to Circle and Tether.
Right now, the protocol sits on $5.5B+ in USDC deposits. That’s leaking an estimated $220M in annual yield to external issuers.
The proposal brings the stablecoin in-house, backs it with treasuries, and lets those yields flow straight into the ecosystem, mostly into $HYPE buybacks.
The validator vote on Sept 14 decides the issuer (Paxos, Frax, Agora, Native, …).
Each proposal has its flavor, but the common thread is simple: turn stablecoin seigniorage into a revenue engine for the network.
Paxos pitches 95% of yield back into HYPE buybacks. Frax pushes 100% yield on-chain. Agora leans retail with fiat ramps.
Yield no longer leaks out, it compounds back into HL.
Why’s this such a big deal?
– Adds another $190M–$220M per year in buyback fuel on top of existing fee-driven burns
– 80% fee cuts on stable/stable spot pairs roll out alongside it, pulling in deeper liquidity and more traders
– Makes HL less dependent on bridged USDC, while improving its regulatory posture (GENIUS + MiCA compliant)
– Positions USDH as the quote asset across perps, spot, and HyperEVM apps
I see this as a multi-layer catalyst:
→ DeFi is moving back toward native stables
→ HL’s TVL already at $2.5B. This could drive another leg, $10B+ isn’t unrealistic in a bull market
→ $HYPE already buys back 97% of platform fees, add another $200M+ in stablecoin yield and the deflationary curve steepens
→ No longer reliant on USDC or Circle. Native stable is tighter loops, stickier ecosystem
USDH becomes the missing piece that turns Hyperliquid into the full-stack financial system it wants to be.
$HYPE already moved ~10% just off the news, but the real upside comes if USDH spins up right.
Still accumulating $HYPE.