A supply shock is a powerful catalyst, especially for traders looking for short-term upside.
Currently, the crisis in West Asia is causing a real squeeze on supply on the oil market. As a result, investor sentiment is evolving, with oil flows resuming and traders increasingly positioning themselves for a further rise. In short, long positions become more aggressive as the speech gains momentum.
In this context, Hyperliquide (HYPE) is starting to emerge as a key beneficiary. According to DeFiLlama data, it now leads DEX perp volume, with weekly volume close to $48 billion, about 2x more than the next platform in line.


Importantly, this change is also attracting the attention of major TradFi players.
Analysts at JPMorgan, for example, point to traders seeking 24/7 oil exposure as the main driver of Hyperliquid’s perp DEX volume surge, a gap that TradFi markets still aren’t covering. As a result, Hyperliquide gains an advantage in capturing additional flows and liquidity.
Notably, this on-chain activity also shows up in HYPE’s price action. On the monthly chart, HYPE is up around 30%, a clear departure from other large-cap altcoins that are mostly posting single-digit gains. In short, the market is starting to price in this advantage.
However, while HYPE now faces resistance around the $2.3K level, there remains a strong case that macro FUD and crowded positioning are causing this move rather than a sustained trend. Therefore, if the flows cool or the positioning becomes too crowded, this increases the risk of unwinding.
So the key question is: if we start seeing significant long squeezes and outflows on Hyperliquid, could this surge act as a signal for a market reset and indicate when the broader crypto market will return to risk?
Traders piling into oil on Hyperliquide raise question of a reset
The conflict in the Middle East has thrown the global oil market into disarray.
According to the Kobeissi Letter, oil prices have risen sharply since December and Saudi Arabia’s market forecasts predict the war will last until April, with $180 designated as the “base case” for oil. In short, the market is bracing for continued volatility and supply-driven moves.
In this setup, Lookonchain reported that a trader deposited 4.105 million USDC on Hyperliquid to open a 5x long position in Brent oil at $20.19, showing how traders chase FOMO and use leverage to capture outsized returns in the oil market. But the bigger picture? Moves like this highlight Hyperliquid’s central role in trading transactions and explain why its DEX volume continues to reach new highs.


From a technical point of view, these perverse bets on Hyperliquide make perfect sense.
As the chart above shows, Brent oil is up 47% so far in March, marking its first monthly rise of more than 40% since the COVID-19 crisis. Prices have already rebounded to 2022 levels around $110, with liquidation of this trade set at $87.87, leaving the trader comfortably sitting on large unrealized gains.
Meanwhile, the broader crypto market is still stuck around a market cap of $2.4 trillion. Capital rotation into risk assets appears capped as traders chase oil momentum, with Hyperliquid standing out as the only altcoin posting double-digit gains.
According to AMBCrypto, this is a key trend to watch. The next risk-taking movement in the crypto market seems linked to a long rush to Hyperliquide. Once these positions begin to unwind, it could signal an easing of geopolitical tensions and open the door to a broader rotation into risk.
Final summary
- Tensions in the Middle East are driving an oil supply shock, fueling FOMO-driven hyperliquid long positions and sending HYPE soaring 30%, highlighting its central role in perp trading.
- Brent oil is up 47% in March while crypto remains stuck, showing that broader moves in risk may hinge on an eventual unwind on Hyperliquid.


