Polymarket Is Getting Banned Everywhere. Hyperliquid Just Launched the Product That Replaces It.

While regulators blocked Polymarket in India, Indonesia, and Spain this week, Hyperliquid quietly shipped HIP-4 outcome contracts for real-world events. Users can now bet on CPI prints and Fed decisions from the same account they use for crypto perps. No external oracle. No UMA. Validators settle everything.

The timing could not be more deliberate. In the same week that Polymarket got blocked in its third country in eight days, Hyperliquid launched native prediction markets for real-world events. Not a testnet. Not a roadmap item. A live product, running on mainnet, settling macro bets through its own validator set.

The first contract: U.S. CPI data. The second: Federal Reserve interest rate decisions. Both categories that Polymarket built its reputation on. Hyperliquid is not just competing. It is offering the replacement.

How HIP-4 Works

HIP-4 is Hyperliquidโ€™s outcome contract standard. Each market is a binary Yes/No bet that settles at either 1 USDC or zero. Fully collateralized. No leverage on the bet itself. You buy โ€œYesโ€ at whatever the market prices it, and if the event happens, you get 1 USDC. If not, you get nothing.

Hyperliquid first tested this on crypto-native outcomes: will Bitcoin trade above $80,000 by Friday? Those bets settled against Hyperliquidโ€™s own price feed. Simple. The new expansion is different. CPI prints and Fed decisions happen off-chain. There is no price feed to reference. Someone has to decide what happened.

Validators Replace the Oracle. That Is the Whole Point.

Polymarket uses UMAโ€™s optimistic oracle for dispute resolution. A human committee reviews challenged outcomes. It works, but it creates a single point of failure. Hyperliquid saw that weakness get exploited this week when a UMA adapter vulnerability cost Polymarket $700,000.

Hyperliquidโ€™s approach is different. Its validator set, the same nodes that secure the L1 chain, ingests news, proposes markets, and votes on settlement outcomes. No external oracle. No third-party dispute layer. The Polymarket exploit earlier this week showed what happens when settlement depends on external infrastructure. Hyperliquid is betting that internalizing resolution eliminates that attack surface.

One Account for Everything

The structural advantage is account-level. On Polymarket, you trade prediction contracts. On Hyperliquid, you trade prediction contracts, crypto perps, pre-IPO synthetics, and commodity futures from the same margin account. Same collateral pool. Same interface.

That is a product moat, not a feature. A trader who holds a Bitcoin perp and wants to hedge against a hot CPI print can do both without moving funds between platforms. Hyperliquid first integrated prediction markets into its perps engine in May. HIP-4 extends that integration from crypto prices to real-world macro events.

Polymarket Cannot Do This

Polymarket is a prediction market. That is all it does. It does it well, with $25 billion in monthly volume at its peak. But it is a single-product platform operating on Polygon, dependent on UMA for settlement, and now blocked in over a dozen countries that classify it as gambling.

Hyperliquid is not just a prediction market. It is a multi-asset trading venue that happens to offer prediction markets as one product among many. That distinction matters for two reasons. First, it reduces regulatory risk: outcome contracts embedded in a derivatives platform look different to regulators than a standalone betting site. Second, it creates stickiness: traders who come for perps discover prediction markets. Traders who come for CPI bets discover perps.

The Risk Hyperliquid Is Taking

Validator-based settlement is elegant but untested at scale. What happens when validators disagree on whether a CPI print met the threshold? What happens when the event is ambiguous? UMAโ€™s oracle has years of dispute resolution history. Hyperliquidโ€™s validators have none. The first contested settlement will be the real test.

There is also the concentration question. Hyperliquidโ€™s validator set is smaller and more centralized than Ethereumโ€™s or even Polygonโ€™s. Giving that same set the power to settle prediction markets adds a governance surface that did not exist before. HYPEโ€™s revenue model routes 97% of fees back to holders. If validators also control which prediction markets exist and how they settle, the concentration of power becomes a legitimate concern.

None of that changes the timing. Polymarket is shrinking geographically. Hyperliquid is expanding product-wise. One platform is fighting bans. The other is shipping features. The market will decide which strategy wins, but right now the momentum is moving in one direction.

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