The digital asset industry is shifting away from launching new cryptocurrencies and toward acting as a 24/7 trading rail for traditional assets such as U.S. equities, gold, and crude oil. At the center of this transition are perpetual futures contracts, which provide continuous price exposure without the transfer of ownership or the settlement constraints of traditional markets.
Analysts say the market’s structure now resembles a global derivatives layer more than an experimental monetary system. In January 2026 alone, combined crypto perpetual futures trading volume reached $7.24 trillion, up 75% in two years, underscoring how derivatives have overtaken spot markets as the main driver of activity.
Perpetuals overtake spot in crypto’s new phase
Perpetual contracts, which have no expiry date, have become the core product of this new market phase. These instruments allow traders to speculate on volatility rather than own the underlying asset, sidestepping legal, custodial, and settlement complexities that come with traditional securities.
The model has boosted liquidity and market efficiency, but it has also amplified leverage-related risk and market swings. Despite ongoing scrutiny over excessive risk-taking and sharp price moves, perpetuals account for the bulk of trading across the sector. Exposure now ranges from NVIDIA stock and major equity indices to crude oil and metals, reinforcing the role of blockchains as an always-on trading infrastructure rather than a factory for new types of money.
Derivatives data has become a more important signal than spot market flows. Analysts increasingly focus on volatility patterns and liquidity movements on major perpetual platforms to gauge market health and capital positioning.
Rise of tokenized assets and real-world exposure
Alongside derivatives, tokenization of real-world assets is accelerating. The market for tokenized assets is on track to surpass $2 trillion this year, as more traditional instruments are mirrored on-chain and traded through perpetual products.
Tokenized gold illustrates this shift. Trading volume in these products hit $90.7 billion in the first quarter of 2026, already topping the total for all of 2025. At several points this year, gold and silver have outperformed Bitcoin, drawing capital and activity into commodity-based perpetuals listed on decentralized venues.
Analysts now see on-chain versions of traditional assets as a primary driver of digital asset activity, suggesting that future growth will depend less on launching new native tokens and more on integrating established financial instruments into blockchain-based markets.
Hyperliquid emerges as dominant on-chain venue
The reshaping of market structure has led to a concentration of liquidity on a handful of trading platforms. Hyperliquid has become the standout beneficiary of this migration, processing over 50.8% of all on-chain perpetual volume as of early June 2026 and handling more than $10.3 billion in a single day.
The platform’s rise unfolded in four distinct waves: the introduction of a centralized exchange-style trading interface; a shift in market trust amid regulatory and transparency concerns around rivals; renewed appetite for macroasset exposure such as gold and crude oil; and a surge in retail trading linked to popular U.S. equities. By offering instant access, visible on-chain transparency, and an order-book experience similar to large centralized exchanges, Hyperliquid absorbed market share while competitors faced regulatory and technical constraints.
Decentralized vs centralized derivatives: a changing balance
Decentralized exchanges (DEXs) specializing in perpetual contracts are gaining ground relative to centralized venues. Average monthly trading volume on decentralized perpetual platforms reached $611.57 billion in early 2026, up from $531.65 billion in 2025.
By contrast, the top centralized perpetual exchanges have seen activity retreat. Their average monthly volume fell 34%, from $7.11 trillion in 2025 to $4.69 trillion over the first four months of 2026. While centralized venues still process significantly more volume than DEXs overall, the trajectory shows an ongoing redistribution of derivatives activity toward on-chain platforms that operate without traditional clearing and brokerage intermediaries.
Stablecoins cement role as settlement backbone
The infrastructure powering this new trading layer is dominated by stablecoins. The combined market capitalization of these dollar-pegged assets is nearing $300 billion, with Tether’s USDT and Circle’s USDC accounting for more than 88% of the total.
In 2025, stablecoins settled approximately $33 trillion in on-chain transactions, surpassing the annual volume handled by Visa and Mastercard combined. This settlement activity underscores a core conclusion emerging from the last decade of experimentation: the most durable use case for blockchain technology is the rapid, low-friction transfer and settlement of existing monetary units, particularly U.S. dollars.
Ethereum’s influence challenged by its own scaling
Ethereum, which once sat at the center of decentralized asset issuance and DeFi experimentation, is seeing its economic model tested by the success of its own scaling solutions. Layer-2 networks now process more daily transactions than the Ethereum mainnet, shifting where user activity and, crucially, fee revenue accumulate.
Following a key software upgrade, the share of revenue that these layer-2 systems pay back to Ethereum for security has dropped sharply, from 41% in 2024 to less than 10% in 2025. At the same time, users can increasingly transact on layer-2 networks without directly holding ETH, weakening its role as the primary value anchor of the ecosystem.
DeFi platforms continue to function as critical infrastructure, but they no longer define the leading growth narrative. Instead, growth is being led by instruments that replicate traditional markets and by rails that carry existing assets and currencies more efficiently.
From speculative tokens to mirrored finance
The broader picture is one of realignment. In the previous cycle, blockchain projects focused on issuing new tokens and building communities and stories around them. Many of these native tokens have since lost value, as their performance depended more on speculation than on cash flows or sustained real-world demand. Bitcoin has been the notable exception, retaining its status as the sector’s primary store-of-value asset.
Today, the most enduring crypto instruments tend to mirror rather than challenge traditional finance. The dollar remains the dominant currency. Bitcoin remains the most recognized digital store of value. And trading, especially through perpetual derivatives, continues to be the main use case drawing capital and activity.
For traders, the implications are clear: the metrics that matter most are shifting from ecosystem activity and token issuance to liquidity, volatility, and value capture across a growing universe of on-chain derivatives and tokenized real-world assets. In this environment, an asset’s worth is judged less by how busy its network appears and more by how effectively it captures and retains value from that activity.
To deepen your understanding of these instruments, explore what perpetuals are and how they work in real trading environments.
Disclaimer: The content on this page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not represent the views or financial advice of Toobit. We make no guarantees regarding the accuracy or completeness of this information and shall not be held liable for any errors, omissions, or outcomes resulting from its use. Investing in digital assets involves risk; users should independently evaluate their financial situation and the risks involved. For further details, please consult our Terms of Service and Risk Disclosure.

