Singapore’s financial regulator has placed decentralized derivatives platform, Hyperliquid, on its Investor Alert List intensifying scrutiny of one of crypto’s fastest-growing trading venues and highlighting a growing regulatory challenge facing decentralized finance (DeFi).
The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) added Hyperliquid to the public warning list on June 26 2026 cautioning investors that entities appearing on the register may be perceived as licensed or regulated when they are not. The list is intended as a consumer protection measure and does not constitute an enforcement action or a finding of legal wrongdoing.
Hyperliquid responded by saying the protocol remains permissionless infrastructure rather than a centralized financial intermediary adding that it has never claimed to be licensed by MAS. The project said users retain custody of their assets while transactions settle transparently on-chain.
The development represents one of the clearest examples yet of regulators shifting their attention from blockchain infrastructure itself toward the user-facing applications that provide access to decentralized markets.
Unlike centralized crypto exchanges, DeFi protocols cannot easily be shut down once deployed on-chain. Instead, regulators are increasingly focusing on websites, interfaces, marketing materials and jurisdiction-specific consumer protections that connect retail investors to those protocols.
The Singapore warning follows similar regulatory attention elsewhere.
Earlier this month, the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority warned that Hyperliquid and affiliated entities may be offering or promoting financial services without authorization underscoring growing concerns over decentralized perpetual futures platforms operating across multiple jurisdictions.
The scrutiny comes despite Hyperliquid emerging as one of crypto’s largest decentralized derivatives platforms. The protocol has become a dominant venue for perpetual futures trading while its native HYPE token has grown into one of the industry’s largest digital assets by market capitalization. Its rapid growth has also drawn attention from traditional financial institutions exploring similar market structures.
For the broader DeFi sector, the MAS warning highlights a regulatory gray area that many protocols may increasingly face. While decentralized settlement and self-custody reduce reliance on centralized intermediaries, regulators continue to expect clear disclosures around
Industry observers say the case could become a blueprint for how regulators supervise permissionless financial infrastructure without directly targeting the underlying blockchain protocols.
Rather than banning decentralized networks, authorities appear increasingly willing to regulate the interfaces and businesses that make those networks accessible to retail users.
Stay tuned to BitKE for deeper insights into the evolving global crypto regulatory space.
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