Perpetual futures trading on Solana just etched a new all-time high, smashing through $20 billion in weekly volume for the first time. The surge, according to data from DefiLlama, was propelled by a single day record on May 18 when daily volume reached $5.78 billion. That day, GMTrade alone accounted for roughly $4.9 billion of the total, a figure that eclipses the combined volume of many older DeFi protocols.
While centralized exchanges still command the bulk of derivatives flow, the numbers point to a structural shift in on-chain markets. Solana’s perpetual DEX ecosystem has evolved from a niche alternative into a legitimate venue for high-frequency leverage trading. GMTrade’s dominance over the past week did not come from a broad-based rally; it was concentrated. That concentration raises questions about what kinds of traders are moving the needle and whether the liquidity is stickier than the usual mercenary capital that cycles through incentive programs.
Attention has also been drawn to a public wager-style trade on Solana perp protocol Phoenix involving Solana Foundation CPO Vibhu and Hyperliquid trader Drews888. While more spectacle than signal, the bet captures the competitive undercurrent between the Solana DeFi scene and Hyperliquid, the leading perpetual trading platform that largely operates outside the Ethereum and Solana DeFi lairs. The rivalry is no longer hypothetical. Volume metrics now support the argument that Solana perps are beginning to eat into market share that Hyperliquid held almost uncontested for much of 2025 and early 2026.
For market participants, the message is twofold. First, the capital efficiency on Solana—low latency, sub-second block times, and negligible transaction costs—is attracting serious levered volume. Second, the infrastructure layer has matured enough that a single protocol like GMTrade can onboard users and execute billions in daily notional without the congestion that plagued Solana during earlier meme coin crazes. Solana’s persistent developer activity supports the idea that the chain’s technical improvements are not a flash in the pan.
Still, not all volume is created equal. Perpetual DEXs often run aggressive fee rebates or token incentive programs that inflate numbers. The source material does not detail whether GMTrade’s $4.9 billion day relied on such mechanics. It is possible that a portion of the flow is less organic than it appears, a recurring theme in DeFi where wash trading can distort on-chain metrics. For institutional desks evaluating whether to route trades through Solana, that uncertainty remains a key barrier, especially as regulatory debates around decentralized derivatives grow louder in Washington.
GMTrade’s sudden climb is reminiscent of past DeFi upstarts that briefly captured outsized market share before fading. Whether this is a lasting shift depends on the protocol’s ability to sustain liquidity without giving away too much in incentives. The broader ecosystem has seen a wave of on-chain financial products expanding beyond simple lending and swapping, and perpetuals are the natural next frontier.
Liquidity fragmentation, however, is a double-edged sword. The more protocols that launch on Solana, the thinner the order books unless there is a clear aggregator or cross-margining layer. Traders may find themselves chasing prices across multiple front-ends, a problem that Hyperliquid largely avoids by concentrating liquidity on its own chain. How Solana-based perp protocols solve this fragmentation will determine whether the $20 billion week becomes a new baseline or a one-off outlier.
For now, the record is a tangible proof point that the DeFi derivatives landscape is no longer a one-chain show. While Hyperliquid’s total value locked and user base remain formidable, the sheer speed at which Solana attracted this volume signals that the competition is now a live issue for builders and market makers alike.


