Oil futures up 7% on Hyperliquid as Trump orders Naval blockade of Hormuz
Oil prices spiked on the Hyperliquid platform after President Donald Trump ordered a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz
What to know:
- Oil prices spiked on the Hyperliquid platform after President Donald Trump ordered a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz following failed nuclear talks with Iran.
- WTI and Brent crude futures jumped about 7 percent and 6 percent, respectively, with WTI trading volume on Hyperliquid reaching $1.53 billion, underscoring growing use of decentralized platforms for price discovery when traditional markets are shut.
- The blockade threatens to turn an already tight market into an unprecedented supply shock as coordinated emergency stockpile releases near their limits, raising the risk of higher inflation, broader market volatility and pressure on risk assets such as Bitcoin.
Notably, WTI futures registered $1.53 billion in trading volume, making it the third-most-traded instrument on the platform behind BTC and ETH. The data highlights growing investor preference for price discovery on decentralized blockchain platforms, especially when traditional markets are closed.
This blockade news couldn’t have come at a worse time, as mid-April marks a critical period for the oil market, when the large-scale drawdown of strategic petroleum reserves coordinated by the International Energy Agency begins to approach its limit.
Those emergency releases, initiated after the war broke out on Feb. 28, have been offsetting a supply shortfall of roughly 4.5 to 5 million barrels per day caused by disrupted flows through the Strait of Hormuz, but as these buffers run down in the coming weeks, that gap risks widening sharply to roughly 10 to 11 million barrels per day if normal supply is not restored.
