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Markets

Hyperliquid's fee machine just printed a new record

@HyperliquidX's native token $HYPE climbed to a fresh all-time high of $76.85 on June 16, before easing back to around $73. The move came alongside a doubling of daily trading volume to $2.1

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 17, 2026
2 min read
NEWS
Hyperliquid's fee machine just printed a new record
CryptoCompass editorial visual for markets coverage.

@HyperliquidX's native token $HYPE climbed to a fresh all-time high of $76.85 on June 16, before easing back to around $73. The move came alongside a doubling of daily trading volume to $2.1 billion, underlining how tightly the token's price is connected to the platform's trading engine.

How the Assistance Fund drives the price

The rally is not purely sentiment-driven. At the core of $HYPE's price action is a protocol mechanism called the Assistance Fund. According to Nexo's tokenomics breakdown, every trade on Hyperliquid generates a fee that flows into a protocol-controlled pool. That pool then uses virtually all of its revenue, up to 99% of perpetual and spot trading fees, to buy $HYPE directly off the open market. The purchases run continuously and are executed by on-chain logic, with no manual intervention required.

The result is a self-reinforcing loop: more trading volume means more fees, more fees mean more buybacks, and more buybacks reduce the supply of tokens in circulation. As CoinShares research noted, the mechanism functions similarly to a corporate share buyback, a structure that lets analysts value $HYPE more like a stock than a speculative token. To date, the Assistance Fund has purchased roughly 44.4 million $HYPE tokens, worth approximately $2.2 billion.

Scale and competitive context

The buyback intensity sets Hyperliquid apart from its peers. Analysis from crypto.news estimates the Assistance Fund operates at an annualized buyback rate of roughly 7% of $HYPE's market cap, a pace described as four to five times more aggressive than comparable mechanisms at Ethereum or $BNB. The platform now processes approximately 70% of all on-chain perpetual futures volume, giving the buyback engine significant and growing firepower.

There is a caveat worth noting. The model depends entirely on sustained trading activity. If volume falls, fee revenue drops and the Assistance Fund has less capital to deploy. That makes $HYPE's continued performance a direct read on whether Hyperliquid can keep its traders engaged.

Sources:Nexo: How Hyperliquid's Tokenomics WorkETF Trends / CoinShares: Inside Hyperliquid's Fee Enginecrypto.news: Why HYPE Is Different