Coinbase will manage USDC treasury on Hyperliquid as it phases out the native USDH stablecoin, signaling deeper institutional control over on-chain.Coinbase will manage USDC treasury on Hyperliquid as it phases out the native USDH stablecoin, signaling deeper institutional control over on-chain.

Coinbase Takes Over USDC Treasury Deployer Role on Hyperliquid, Phases Out Native USDH Stablecoin

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Hyperliquid’s native stablecoin is on its way out. The decentralized perpetuals exchange has chosen Coinbase as the official treasury deployer for USDC, a move that sidelines the platform’s own USDH token and hands a major plumbing role to a centralized entity. For a venue that built its reputation on permissionless leverage trading, the decision creates a clear trade-off: deeper liquidity and institutional alignment for a piece of on-chain governance.

According to the original report, Native Markets has already agreed to terms allowing Coinbase to purchase the USDH brand assets. The USDH market will be phased out over an unspecified timeline, effectively making USDC the primary stablecoin for collateral and settlement on Hyperliquid. The shift gives Coinbase direct exposure to treasury management inside one of the most actively used derivatives DEXs, while also extending USDC’s footprint deeper into on-chain trading infrastructure.

A strategic shift for on-chain stablecoin markets

By taking the treasury deployer seat, Coinbase can directly manage and mint USDC in connection with Hyperliquid’s trading activity. It is a role that normally sits with a protocol’s own team or a DAO treasury, not an external exchange. For Coinbase, the logic is straightforward: USDC needs to be where volume lives, and Hyperliquid has consistently ranked among the top DEXs by total value locked and daily notional volume. Owning the brand assets of a competitor stablecoin and absorbing its market is an efficient way to tighten a liquidity loop that rewards scale.

Stablecoin consolidation like this fits a larger trend where tokenized dollar equivalents are becoming infrastructure rather than standalone products. Last week’s tokenization roundup showed how real-world asset markets are maturing under institutional guidance, and stablecoins are the settlement layer behind much of that activity. Hyperliquid’s pivot away from a proprietary token signals that even high-growth DeFi protocols are prioritizing liquidity depth over token sovereignty, especially when an established player can provide both.

What the USDH phase-out means for Hyperliquid users

Traders and liquidity providers who hold USDH will eventually need to convert into USDC or another approved asset. The absence of a fixed deadline introduces operational uncertainty. While a managed transition can avoid a rushed unwind, it also leaves users in limbo about collateral haircuts, redemption windows, and potential slippage if the pair loses support before the phase-out completes.

The deeper question is whether Hyperliquid’s community will accept an exchange-controlled treasury function without pushback. DEX users often value neutrality, and letting a large centralized exchange hold this role could affect perceptions of the protocol’s independence. For now, the market appears to be watching rather than reacting, as there has been no sharp dislocation in Hyperliquid’s trading metrics.

Regulatory backdrop and institutional positioning

Coinbase is operating under a US regulatory microscope, and moves like this show it is betting that deep integration with compliant stablecoins across DeFi will both expand its business and improve its standing with policymakers. The timing is notable: only a few weeks ago, banks were pushing to derail a major crypto bill in the Senate that could define stablecoin rules for years. Having an active treasury deployer role on a leading DEX puts Coinbase at the center of the narrative around regulated, transparent stablecoin operations.

At the same time, institutional demand for on-chain stablecoin access is not limited to any single platform. Recent surges like the one seen with SUI following its institutional staking and fintech partnership illustrate that networks integrating compliant dollar rails are being rewarded with higher volumes and sticky user bases. Hyperliquid’s transition is another piece of a market structure where the stablecoin issuer and the exchange are becoming harder to separate.

What remains uncertain is how native communities on other DEXs will react if similar takeover offers surface. For now, the USDH example suggests that co-opting a protocol’s stablecoin layer may become a repeatable strategy for exchanges looking to consolidate liquidity and regulatory goodwill in one move.

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