Coinbase and Circle’s commitment to Hyperliquid’s AQAv2 upgrade sent HYPE up to roughly $45 on May 14, a deal that makes USDC the platform’s aligned quote asset and directs the vast majority of reserve-yield revenue back to the protocol.
The rally reflected traders reading the announcement as institutional validation of the protocol-aligned stablecoin model pioneered by Native Markets’ USDH on Hyperliquid.
Under AQAv2, Coinbase becomes the official USDC treasury deployer on Hyperliquid. Circle handles the technical deployment and cross-chain infrastructure, including CCTP, the protocol that enables USDC to move natively between chains via a burn-and-mint mechanism.
Native Markets separately granted Coinbase the right to purchase USDH brand assets, while Native Markets stays independent as an organization.
USDH stays fully backed through the transition, with markets sunsetting over time and feeless conversion and fiat redemption paths available to users.
| Stablecoin role | Before AQAv2 | After AQAv2 | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liquidity leader | USDC already dominated Hyperliquid stablecoin liquidity | USDC becomes the aligned quote asset | Hyperliquid keeps its deepest stablecoin rail |
| Protocol alignment | USDH pioneered reserve-yield sharing with the ecosystem | USDC adopts the aligned model through Coinbase treasury deployment | The native model gets scaled by incumbents |
| Technical infrastructure | Stablecoin movement was more fragmented | Circle handles CCTP and cross-chain infrastructure | Cleaner native USDC movement across chains |
| Reserve-yield economics | USDH kept yield aligned with Hyperliquid | Coinbase shares the vast majority of USDC reserve yield with the protocol | Stablecoin issuers compete on economics, not just liquidity |
| USDH role | Native aligned stablecoin | Fully backed, but markets sunset over time | USDH becomes the proof-of-concept rather than the dominant quote asset |
| HYPE alignment | Protocol token tied to ecosystem growth | Coinbase and Circle commit to staking HYPE | The partnership becomes economically aligned |
The problem AQAv2 solves
Hyperliquid’s stablecoin setup carried a clean tension before AQAv2.
USDC already held the dominant position, as Coinbase reported USDC on Hyperliquid reached roughly $5 billion, and DeFiLlama’s Hyperliquid L1 dashboard showed USDC at approximately 93.5% of the platform’s roughly $5.43 billion in stablecoin market cap.
USDH ran an aligned reserve-yield model that kept stablecoin reserve income within the Hyperliquid protocol.
That raised the question of why all reserve yield leaves the protocol if Hyperliquid supplies users, liquidity, and trading activity that make a stablecoin useful.
Native Markets built an answer to that question, and USDC brought the liquidity, and AQAv2 merges both under a single framework.
Under AQAv2, Coinbase serves as the protocol’s treasury deployer and shares the vast majority of reserve-yield revenue from Hyperliquid’s USDC supply with the protocol.
Native Markets says this makes USDC Hyperliquid’s most aligned stablecoin, and Coinbase described its move as building on the foundations established by Native Markets and USDH.
The reserve-yield economics
Prior estimates put the annual reserve-yield opportunity on Hyperliquid’s USDC reserves at $150 million to $220 million. Applying a 3% to 4.5% yield assumption to a $5 billion USDC supply yields a gross annual reserve income range of $150 million to $225 million, consistent with those estimates.
At 70% sharing, the protocol receives $105 million to $157.5 million annually, and at 90%, $135 million to $202.5 million.
DeFiLlama showed Hyperliquid’s trading scale at roughly $6.16 billion in 24-hour perps volume, $41.05 billion in 7-day perps volume, and approximately $9.4 billion in open interest.
Even the lower end of that range represents a recurring revenue stream large enough to reshape the protocol’s economics.
| Hyperliquid USDC supply | Yield assumption | Gross annual reserve income | Protocol share at 70% | Protocol share at 90% |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $5B | 3.0% | $150M | $105M | $135M |
| $5B | 3.5% | $175M | $122.5M | $157.5M |
| $5B | 4.0% | $200M | $140M | $180M |
| $5B | 4.5% | $225M | $157.5M | $202.5M |
Circle is also committed to staking 500,000 HYPE as part of the arrangement, while Coinbase increased its own staked HYPE position. Both commitments convert the partnership from a technical integration into an economically aligned relationship, with Circle and Coinbase taking on protocol risk alongside Hyperliquid.
The bull case for USDC and Hyperliquid
Hyperliquid forced incumbents to compete on protocol economics, and the AQAv2 structure gives every other major DeFi venue a reference point for negotiating on the same terms.
AQAv2 ends fragmentation between USDC and USDH, redirects reserve yield to the protocol, and establishes USDC as the quote asset for future canonical HIP-4 markets, a governance-level structural commitment that locks the aligned model into Hyperliquid’s market architecture.
If stablecoin issuers accept protocol-aligned yield-sharing at Hyperliquid’s scale, venues with comparable demand can bargain for the same terms.
The total stablecoin market cap reached roughly $322.3 billion, with USDC at $76.9 billion, and reserve income from USDC’s distribution across chains and venues flows almost entirely to Circle and its partners.
Hyperliquid’s AQAv2 establishes the template for how those venues negotiate the sharing of that income.
HYPE benefits from the direct reserve-yield income AQAv2 creates and from Hyperliquid’s positioning as the platform that proved the model.
Native Markets framed USDH as having brought incumbents to the table and reoriented the economics of stablecoin issuance, while Coinbase’s decision to deploy USDC within the aligned yield structure USDH established demonstrates that USDH set the terms.
The merge goes wrong
AQAv2 ties Hyperliquid’s stablecoin stack more tightly to Coinbase and Circle. USDH gave Hyperliquid a native stablecoin it controls entirely, while USDC provides deeper liquidity from an external issuer operating under its own regulatory obligations and business incentives.
| Outcome | Bullish read | Risk to watch |
|---|---|---|
| USDC becomes the aligned quote asset | Hyperliquid gets deep liquidity and protocol yield alignment in one asset | Greater dependence on Coinbase and Circle |
| USDH markets sunset over time | USDH proved the model and pushed incumbents to adopt it | Migration friction for users and builders |
| Reserve yield flows back to the protocol | Recurring revenue could strengthen Hyperliquid’s economics | “Vast majority” has not been quantified publicly |
| Coinbase and Circle stake HYPE | Partnership becomes economically aligned, not just technical | Staked commitments do not eliminate issuer or regulatory risk |
| Other venues see the template | Stablecoin issuers may have to share economics with major platforms | Smaller venues may lack the leverage to negotiate similar terms |
| Stablecoin competition shifts | The market moves from liquidity-only competition to yield-sharing competition | Incumbents may only offer alignment to strategically important venues |
If Coinbase or Circle renegotiates on less favorable terms, or if USDC faces stricter regulatory requirements, Hyperliquid carries more single-issuer concentration risk than it did when a native stablecoin was the aligned quote asset.
The yield-sharing terms stay unresolved at the most consequential level. The “vast majority” has not been quantified publicly, and the gap between 70% and 90% of Hyperliquid’s USDC supply represents tens of millions of dollars annually.
If the protocol share proves smaller than traders are pricing into HYPE, the rally corrects toward the deal’s actual economic weight.
In another exposure case, USDH markets stay functional and fully backed, but will sunset over time. Users who hold USDH in strategies built around protocol-aligned yield must migrate to USDC under AQAv2, and the friction in that process creates near-term drag on collateral efficiency.
The broader stablecoin contest
Stablecoin issuers built their current positions on liquidity and distribution, taking the deepest pools across the most venues and capturing all reserve income from the supply generated there.
Hyperliquid’s AQAv2 broke that arrangement at a venue large enough to set a precedent, with $41 billion in 7-day perps volume, and $9.4 billion in open interest, putting Hyperliquid in the bracket of platforms stablecoin issuers cannot afford to lose on the issuer’s terms alone.
The stablecoin competition is moving from who holds the deepest liquidity to who shares the economics with the platform generating demand.
Coinbase and Circle accepted those terms at Hyperliquid’s scale, and USDH’s protocol-aligned model is now the template Coinbase deploys across Hyperliquid’s market architecture.
The post HYPE jumps as Coinbase and Circle back Hyperliquid’s stablecoin model appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Coinbase and Circle’s commitment to Hyperliquid’s AQAv2 upgrade sent HYPE up to roughly $45 on May 14, a deal that makes USDC the platform’s aligned quote asset and directs the vast majority of reserve-yield revenue back to the protocol. The rally reflected traders reading the announcement as institutional validation of the protocol-aligned stablecoin model pioneered
The post HYPE jumps as Coinbase and Circle back Hyperliquid’s stablecoin model appeared first on CryptoSlate. DeFi, Featured, Stablecoins
This articles is written by : Nermeen Nabil Khear Abdelmalak
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