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If CLARITY stalls, on-chain perps stay offshore — and US traders get pushed out

Hyperliquid launched a policy center in Washington on Feb. 18, seeded with 1 million HYPE tokens worth roughly $28 million, led by Jake Chervinsky, the crypto lawyer who spent years building the industry’s Capitol Hill playbook.

The Hyperliquid Policy Center operates as a 501(c)(4) focused on decentralized finance and perpetual derivatives. This isn’t just another crypto company hiring lobbyists. It’s a protocol that funds a sustained DC presence with its native token, making policy infrastructure part of the product itself.

The move signals something broader: DeFi’s “code routes around regulation” era is coming to an end. Policy is now part of the moat. And the battleground is derivatives, because perpetual futures are the largest real on-chain use case that US regulators still don’t know how to handle.

Why derivatives are the line

Hyperliquid processed $256 billion in perpetual futures volume over the past 30 days, with open interest exceeding $5 billion.

When a venue becomes meaningful market infrastructure for leveraged trading, it attracts scrutiny. The UK maintains its ban on retail crypto-derivatives even as it loosens other access.

The CFTC brought enforcement actions against bZeroX and Ooki DAO for offering illegal off-exchange digital-asset trading. Perps dominate crypto derivatives markets, accounting for roughly 75% of total activity, largely because onshore rules remain ambiguous.

Perpetuals don’t expire and use continuous funding rates instead of settlement mechanics. That simplicity creates regulatory friction: perps don’t fit cleanly into existing commodity futures statutes.

Chervinsky told Fortune that perps offer “more direct exposure to the underlying asset” than traditional derivatives, but that same design makes them harder to regulate.

The Hyperliquid Policy Center exists to make perps legible to lawmakers before lawmakers make them illegal by default.

The DC window for DeFi is open

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Congress it needs to pass a major crypto market-structure bill by spring 2026, warning the coalition could fracture if delayed.

The SEC and CFTC held a joint harmonization event on Jan. 27. These aren’t abstract conversations, they’re drafting sessions for the map.

The CLARITY Act passed the House in July 2025 and sits in the Senate Banking Committee. It establishes a federal market structure for digital commodities, including frameworks for exchange and broker registration, and defines terms such as “mature blockchains.”

However, the Congressional Research Service’s analysis explicitly states that CLARITY’s framework excludes derivatives. Even if market structure legislation passes, leveraged perpetuals remain unresolved.

Meanwhile, stablecoin regulation is becoming law. The GENIUS Act was passed in July 2025, establishing a federal framework for a stablecoin. Standard Chartered forecasts that stablecoin supply will grow to $2 trillion by 2028.

The contrast is stark: payment rails are gaining clarity, while trading rails remain ambiguous. This split defines crypto’s next DC battle.

Timeline shows stablecoins gained regulatory clarity through GENIUS Act while CLARITY excludes derivatives, leaving perpetuals unresolved as Treasury pushes spring 2026 deadline.

The K Street numbers

Digital asset sector lobbying spending rose 66% to $40.6 million in 2025, according to OpenSecrets data. Big banks spent $86.8 million.

Crypto is learning DC the TradFi way: sustained institutional presence, technical research, relationship cultivation. Hyperliquid’s $28 million seed round exceeds what most crypto advocacy groups spend in a year. The Digital Chamber spent $5.6 million in 2024, and the Blockchain Association spent $8.3 million.

The Hyperliquid Policy Center isn’t alone.

The DeFi Education Fund has operated since 2021. Ethereum ecosystem protocols formed the Ethereum Protocol Advocacy Alliance in November 2025. The Solana Policy Institute exists.

These aren’t ad hoc legal defense funds. They’re institutionalized policy layers operating as 501(c)(4) nonprofits with full-time staff and Hill briefing schedules.

DeFi on K Street
Hyperliquid’s $28 million policy center funding exceeds annual spending by established crypto advocacy groups like Blockchain Association and Digital Chamber combined.

What a policy moat means

DeFi venues now compete on three dimensions: market design (user experience, liquidity, fees), compliance design (what can be compelled, who controls interfaces), and narrative design (how “decentralized” gets defined in statute).

CLARITY creates registration concepts for digital commodity exchanges and brokers, but explicitly excludes derivatives, leaving perps in regulatory limbo.

The practical implication: even if Hyperliquid’s protocol remains globally accessible, US-facing front ends will face pressure to adopt registration-like standards, such as surveillance, disclosure, segregation, and KYC gating.

The question is whether the US uses routes through compliant intermediaries or targets control points, such as operators and governance participants, for enforcement.

The CFTC’s enforcement history suggests regulators will pursue the latter if the former doesn’t materialize.

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ScenarioTrigger / policy catalystRegulatory postureWhat happens to US accessMarket outcome
Regulated access paths emergeSpring 2026 market-structure momentum holds; SEC/CFTC harmonization continues; follow-on work clarifies how onchain perps can fit into a compliant framework“Yes, but” regime: permissioned rails + registration-like expectations for interfacesUS-facing front ends adopt KYC gating, disclosures, surveillance, segregation, and tighter controls; base protocols remain globally accessible but US UX becomes “regulated mode”Volume consolidates into a few venues that can afford compliance; policy moats form; perps become more institutionally legible (but less permissionless)
Front-end chokepoint crackdownEnforcement prioritizes control points (operators, key contributors, UI hosts, governance actors) after limited legislative progress“Enforcement-first” posture: focus on intermediaries and “effective control” rather than protocol ideologyMore geofencing, front-end shutdown risk, and degraded access; US users pushed to offshore routes/APIs and fragmented liquidityTrading persists but routes around the US; liquidity fragments; compliance becomes a competitive weapon; higher legal risk premium for token-linked venues
Legislative breakdown → offshore dominanceCoalition fractures; CLARITY stalls or advances without derivatives; stablecoins get clarity while perps remain unaddressed“No clear pathway” regime: derivatives remain in limbo; policy uncertainty persistsUS access stays gray/limited; compliant onshore perps don’t materialize at scale; offshore remains the defaultOffshore venues keep dominance; onchain perps grow globally but US participation is structurally constrained; DC becomes a recurring headline risk rather than a solved moat