Crypto Super Apps Merge Perps, Prediction Markets and Memecoins as Regulators Fight Back
Hyperliquid, Kalshi, Polymarket and Pump.fun converge into gambling-style platforms as CFTC and state attorneys general clash over jurisdiction
نظرة سريعة
- Four major crypto platforms—Hyperliquid, Kalshi, Polymarket, and Pump.fun—are rapidly converging by adding perpetual futures, prediction markets, and memecoin trading into unified super apps designed to keep users in continuous speculative loops.
- Hyperliquid handles $191 billion in 30-day perp volume while Kalshi and Polymarket target $96B and $84B respectively in 2026 event market volumes.
- The convergence is drawing fierce regulatory scrutiny as the CFTC asserts federal jurisdiction while state attorneys general in New York and New Jersey argue these products constitute illegal gambling.
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Crypto platforms are rapidly converging from distinct product categories into unified super apps. Hyperliquid started as perp venue, Kalshi as regulated prediction market, Polymarket as political/event predictions, Pump.fun as memecoin launchpad. All four now target the same user retention model: keeping speculators in continuous loops with high exit costs.
Crypto's biggest venues are quietly stitching perps, prediction markets, and memecoins into gambling-style super apps designed to keep users betting around the clock. That shift is turning Bitcoin, event contracts, and meme coins into pieces of the same speculative machine, and dragging regulators into a fight over where trading ends and wagering begins.
Kalshi is reportedly preparing to offer US crypto perpetual futures, while Polymarket announced today that perpetual contracts are coming to its platform and opened early access sign-ups. Hyperliquid's docs support outcome token trading alongside its mainnet-deployed perpetuals via the Hyperliquid Improvement Proposal 4 (HIP-4). Pump.fun has evolved over the past few years into a social trading environment where users can browse coins, follow creators, watch livestreams, and swap tokens without leaving the app.
The common denominator across all four platforms is a logic of keeping users in a continuous speculative loop, capturing every stage of their risk appetite, and making the exit cost high enough that they never need to go elsewhere.
The economics driving the convergence are striking. Hyperliquid currently posts roughly $191 billion in 30-day perp volume, $61 million in 30-day fees, and about $7.35 billion in open interest, equivalent to an implied gross fee rate of around 3.1 basis points. For event markets, Clear Street estimates 2026 volumes of $96 billion for Kalshi and $84 billion for Polymarket, with take rates of approximately 2% and 0.5%, respectively. At those rates, Kalshi-style event flow generates roughly 64 times as much revenue per notional dollar as Hyperliquid's perp flow, and Polymarket-style flow comes in at about 16 times richer.
A perp exchange adding event contracts seeks to attract higher-margin flow from the same users it already has, while a prediction market platform moving into perpetuals adds a continuous-revenue layer to a business that otherwise earns only when discrete events resolve.
The Financial Times reported in March that 5-minute and 15-minute crypto bets on Polymarket and Kalshi were generating roughly $70 million in daily trading volume and accounted for more than half of total trading on those platforms. Short-duration contracts now account for the majority of trading activity on both platforms, and their dominance helps explain why Hyperliquid's testnet docs include a recurring HYPE price binary with a 3-minute settlement period. The direction of travel across every major venue runs toward shorter, more repeatable, more monetizable cycles.
The convergence moment is here. Hyperliquid built its identity on permissionless perpetuals and the deepest on-chain order book in crypto. Its mainnet HIP-3 protocol lets builders deploy custom perp contracts without approval. Its testnet now documents outcome token trading with fee structures that charge only on closing or settlement, an architecture that makes event contracts cheap to open and costly to walk away from. Mainnet deployment of outcome contracts sits one decision away, since the fee structure, settlement logic, and contract architecture are already documented.
Kalshi built its position through regulated event contracts under CFTC oversight, running crypto predictions across weekly and monthly horizons, and winning a federal legal fight when the Third Circuit ruled that federal derivatives law preempts New Jersey's attempt to block its sports event contracts. Kalshi is now reportedly preparing to add crypto perpetual futures, importing the always-on leveraged product that made crypto venues sticky.
Polymarket completed the picture with its announcement, stating that users can now "lever" the future, while entering perpetual futures and opening early access sign-ups. The platform already runs 5-minute and 15-minute Bitcoin directional markets alongside longer-horizon political and macro questions, conditioning its user base toward short-duration, high-frequency speculation. Perpetuals extend that behavior into a continuous loop, as two of the largest prediction market platforms now explicitly target the same product stack that made crypto perp venues dominant.
Pump.fun closes the loop from the issuance side. Its Android app packages coin creation, creator following, livestream discovery, and memecoin trading into a single interface. Its own disclosures describe memecoins as "for entertainment purposes only." That language functions as a positioning statement about what the platform actually sells.
The regulatory environment beneath this convergence is an active collision between two frameworks with incompatible premises. On Mar. 12, the CFTC opened an advance notice of proposed rulemaking on prediction markets and asserted exclusive federal jurisdiction over them. On Apr. 6, the Third Circuit sided with Kalshi on jurisdictional grounds, though the dissenting judge wrote that Kalshi's offerings were virtually indistinguishable from sportsbook gambling. On Apr. 21, New York's attorney general sued Coinbase and Gemini, arguing that their prediction market products constitute illegal gambling under state law and are accessible to users aged 18 to 20. CME's Terry Duffy has publicly called for clearer rules distinguishing event contracts from gambling, even as CME launched an event contract platform with FanDuel.
Federal derivatives logic treats these instruments as market infrastructure, while state gambling logic treats them as wagering products requiring casino-style licensing. As more features get bundled into fewer platforms, every new product launch becomes a jurisdictional question. Polymarket's announcement sharpens that problem considerably. Its existing short-duration crypto markets already sit in regulatory ambiguity, and layering perpetuals onto a product set that state attorneys general are actively framing as gambling only deepens the exposure.
If the CFTC's rulemaking produces workable definitions and preemptive clarity, the onshore super app model accelerates. Kalshi adds perpetuals, Hyperliquid extends its outcome infrastructure to mainnet, and Polymarket's perp launch deepens a product stack already used by millions for short-horizon bets. Distribution partnerships normalize prediction markets as a standard brokerage feature, such as Plus500 distributing Kalshi contracts, and Fox is integrating Kalshi data. In that environment, the venue that bundles perps, event contracts, and asset creation into one interface captures a dominant share of retail speculative attention. Bitcoin functions as the bridge asset, serving simultaneously as a perpetual underlying and a prediction market feed.
The bear case runs through the states. If New York's lawsuit succeeds or inspires coordinated enforcement by other attorneys general, Polymarket's perp expansion becomes an immediate target. Separating high-risk prediction products from core trading to satisfy different regulatory regimes simultaneously becomes the only viable path. The venues that built compliance moats early would hold structural advantages. At the same time, those that relied on regulatory ambiguity would face hard choices about which license to choose and which products to cut.
Bitcoin sits at the center of this race because it is the most liquid asset across all of these platforms. Every new user who understands directional Bitcoin price movement can immediately engage with a 15-minute contract on Polymarket, a Bitcoin perp on Hyperliquid, or a "How high will Bitcoin get this month?" contract on Kalshi. The next phase will be defined less by new product ideas than by who is allowed to run them. If federal derivatives rules win out over state gambling laws, onshore platforms that look most like casinos for perps and prediction markets could become a normalized part of the brokerage stack. If states succeed in forcing separation, the gambling super-app vision fractures and access to Bitcoin-linked bets splinters along jurisdictional lines. Either way, the race is no longer about inventing the next speculative product. Venues now focus on whether they can keep users inside the loop without getting shut down.
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توقعات الذكاء الاصطناعي — احتمالات وليست حقائق
CFTC will issue rulemaking on prediction market definitions within 6-12 months
مرجح · خلال أشهر
More state attorneys general will file enforcement actions against crypto prediction platforms
مرجح · خلال أشهر
At least one major platform will add all three product types (perps, prediction markets, memecoins) to single interface
مرجح جداً · خلال أشهر
أسئلة مفتوحة
- Will CFTC rulemaking produce workable definitions that preempt state gambling laws?
- Will New York's lawsuit succeed and inspire broader state enforcement?
- Which platforms will obtain necessary licenses to operate across jurisdictions?
- How will platforms separate products to satisfy different regulatory regimes?






