Hyperliquid News & Prediction Market Coverage
Track the latest Hyperliquid news across prediction markets. PredictionNews is following 11 active Hyperliquid stories across regulation, legal action, market moves, and platform developments, each clustered from original reporting and summarized for operators, traders, and regulators.
Latest News
Kalshi launches first CFTC-approved perpetual futures for U.S. traders
LegalCFTC approves first U.S. bitcoin perpetual futures for Kalshi and Coinbase
TradingPolymarket tops Hyperliquid in daily fees as HYPE $52 odds collapse to 19%
OpinionOn-chain prediction market platforms draw retail, analyst attention
TradingHyperliquid launches validator-governed event contracts to challenge Polymarket
DealsHyperliquid launches validator-settled prediction markets to compete with Polymarket
TradingHyperliquid surpasses Polymarket in BTC binary trading volume within days
TechBitcoin tops $79K as Hyperliquid launches BTC price prediction market
TechHyperliquid proposes BTC-settled prediction markets as core exchange primitive
TradingHyperliquid launches binary prediction markets, targets Polymarket
TradingCrypto Exchange Hyperliquid Targets Kalshi, Polymarket with Prediction Market Push
Frequently Asked Questions
Where can I find the latest Hyperliquid news?
Right here. PredictionNews tracks 11 active Hyperliquid stories, each clustered from original reporting and summarized for prediction-market operators, traders, and regulators, and refreshed throughout the day.
Are prediction markets legal in the US?
Federally, yes. Platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket US operate as CFTC-regulated event-contract exchanges, which is why they're available even in states where sports betting is banned. Legality is contested at the state level, especially for sports contracts, the regulatory fight PredictionNews tracks daily.
Are prediction markets the same as gambling?
Legally, no. They're overseen by the CFTC as financial event contracts, not by state gambling regulators, and you trade "Yes"/"No" shares priced between $0 and $1 rather than betting against a bookmaker's odds. That distinction is at the heart of the current regulatory debate.
How do prediction markets work?
You buy shares in a "Yes" or "No" outcome priced between $0 and $1. The price reflects the market's implied probability of the event. Correct predictions settle at $1 per share, incorrect ones at $0. They function like an exchange, not a sportsbook.