The Unbundling of the Stock Market

marsbitPublicado a 2026-04-06Actualizado a 2026-04-06

Resumen

The article "The Unbundling of Stock Markets" by Prathik Desai argues that traditional financial markets, built on outdated structures like fixed trading hours and centralized exchanges, are being disrupted. Recent developments, such as S&P licensing its 500 index to a new crypto exchange (Hyperliquid), Nasdaq's SEC-approved tokenized stock trading, and Cboe's proposal for near 24/5 US equity trading, signal a shift towards unbundled, efficient, and accessible markets. Capital seeks the fastest path to price information, and new platforms like Hyperliquid's HIP-3, which offers 24/7 trading of traditional assets (e.g., commodities, indices) via perpetual contracts, are gaining traction due to their liquidity, lower friction, and ability to react to global events in real-time. The author concludes that market participants will adopt any structure that reduces the delay between events and price discovery, regardless of whether it originates from traditional institutions or permissionless blockchain platforms.

Author: Prathik Desai

Compiled by: Block unicorn

Preface

Clocks are not a good way to cover up delays. For decades, financial markets have been built around the speed of information transmission. They introduced closing bells, batch settlements, and regional exchanges, which made sense in an era of slow information flow. But all that has changed. Capital does not wait. Just as water always finds a crack, so does capital. Financial gravity pulls it towards the fastest path to obtain price information. This is the law of the market. Market participants will not tolerate inefficiency forever.

This is what I have observed from a macro perspective over the past few weeks as financial markets have evolved.

In today's article, I will help you understand what has broken the old bundled structure of financial markets, transforming it into a more efficient, unbundled structure that spans different venues, wrappers, and times.

Changing of the Guard

I have been studying finance for over a decade. In the early stages of my learning, I always viewed traditional stock exchanges as synonymous with the market. For most of their development, stock exchanges were the place where everyone and everything converged: buyers, sellers, regulators, and the technology that drives the market. It had indices tracking its components, and it had clocks indicating trading hours, telling everyone when they could trade and when they could not.

But this has changed in the past few years. In fact, just in the past few weeks, we have seen several developments that confirm this shift.

On March 18, S&P Dow Jones Indices licensed the S&P 500 index to Trade[XYZ], allowing HIP-3 market deployers to launch the first and only S&P 500 perpetual derivatives contract on the Hyperliquid exchange. The S&P 500 is the world's most followed large-cap U.S. equity index, tracking 500 leading U.S. companies, covering about 80% of the total U.S. market capitalization, with a total market cap of over $61 trillion. The index covers at least half of the global equity market's capitalization.

This is an index with nearly 70 years of history, listed on a market that is only 6 months old.

The day after S&P's announcement, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approved Nasdaq's application to trade and settle some stocks in tokenized form. Nasdaq is one of the world's most active trading venues, often exceeding the nominal trading volume of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), the world's largest exchange by market capitalization.

On March 16, Cboe Global Markets (Cboe Global Markets) filed a proposal with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to launch "near 24x5 U.S. equity trading." The largest operating body behind this U.S. financial exchange stated that it is ready to provide 24/5 equity trading services as early as December 2026.

But why? There is growing demand for extended U.S. equity trading hours.

These three initiatives collectively target the outdated bundled trading structure. Hyperliquid's launch of an S&P 500 futures trading market challenges the decades-old convention where investors could only trade traditional indices through traditional markets. It also enables 24/7 global trading of one of the most tracked large-cap indices.

Nasdaq's tokenized stock trading initiative targets infrastructure. It introduces a new form of wrapping, allowing the same stock to be traded in different ways. Previous attempts at tokenizing stocks have been criticized by the industry.

Investors questioned whether these tokens享有 the same rights as the original shares.

But, if I provide the same equity exposure through a token on the blockchain, without losing the voting rights and legal protections attached to the original dematerialized shares, wouldn't you accept it?

Why would you do this? What's in it for you?

Well, if you are an investor outside the U.S. who wants easier access to the stock market of the world's largest economy? What if this tokenized stock makes it easier for you to integrate it with collateral and lending systems?

When you consider 24/7 trading, these advantages multiply.

This is what Cboe is attacking. Its near 24x5 (24 hours a day, 5 days a week) trading proposal aims to acknowledge that capital does not wait for office hours. Traders always want to express their views immediately after receiving information. If Cboe does not provide them with a market to express their views, then traders will flock to other platforms that do.

Nothing I'm talking about is hypothetical, nor is it something that "might happen in the near future." They are happening, right now, as we speak.

An Unbundled Future

The adoption of financial product unbundling is most evident in Hyperliquid's HIP-3 market, which only officially launched in late October 2025.

In the past month alone, the cumulative trading volume on the HIP-3 market increased by $72 billion. The cumulative volume for the previous four months was $78 billion.

In March, Trade[XYZ] perpetual markets on traditional financial commodities and equities continued to account for 90% of HIP-3's daily trading volume. But this is not the most interesting aspect.

More than half of Trade[XYZ]'s trading volume comes from perpetual contract markets for silver, crude oil, Brent crude, and gold.

Hyperliquid provides a unified trading platform for spot cryptocurrencies as well as perpetual contracts for both cryptocurrencies and traditional assets. This not only simplifies the trading process on a unified platform but also brings higher liquidity, a unified user interface, and tighter bid-ask spreads.

Traders still want to trade some of the largest, hottest assets, spanning commodities, publicly listed companies, large private companies, and indices. You might want to trade silver, gold, crude oil, Tesla, Apple, Amazon, Google, an index tracking the top 100 U.S. non-financial companies, and the S&P 500 index—all of which can be done on the Hyperliquid platform.

HIP-3 unbundles the function of investing in these assets from the existing exchange infrastructure, while still tracking the underlying assets of their original benchmarks. So when you go long on a silver futures contract on HIP-3, the underlying asset it tracks is still pegged to the value of one ounce of silver in the Pyth data feed.

Traders have switched from previous platforms to trading silver on HIP-3 because HIP-3 does not distinguish between U.S. and non-U.S. traders, nor does it follow any specific time. Whenever an event occurs that traders want to express a view on through asset pricing, HIP-3 provides them with a market, regardless of the trader's geographic location or time zone.

The significant growth in open interest (OI) on the Hyperliquid platform over the past few weeks fully demonstrates the above results. OI measures the total value of outstanding derivative positions. Unlike volume, which reflects trading activity, OI reflects trading commitment.

极

Open interest was $1.13 billion on March 1 and doubled to $2.2 billion on April 1. This shows that traders are confident in Hyperliquid's perpetual contracts and are locking in funds.

These metrics indicate that when market access is easier and there is less friction, traders will not be loyal to a particular platform or asset class. They will choose any platform that offers volatility, convenience, and liquidity.

This is why traditional institutions like S&P, Nasdaq, and Cboe are taking steps to acknowledge this behavior.

At least two recent events have demonstrated the importance of 24/7 trading and market volatility to traders.

Saurabh wrote in a tweet on Decentralised.Co: "On February 28, the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran during traditional market hours. Within hours, the price of oil-linked perpetual contracts on the Hyperliquid platform surged 5% as traders digested the shock in real time."

Just two weeks after the outbreak of war, the trading volume of oil-linked perpetual contracts surged from $200 million to a cumulative $6 billion.

A major隐患 of emerging platforms is liquidity. If liquidity is insufficient, bid-ask spreads may widen, causing traders to face a pricing disadvantage worse than on other platforms.

Last week, as U.S. President Trump consulted with Iranian officials on holding "productive talks," the Hyperliquid platform demonstrated its strong liquidity. The newly launched S&P 500 index futures based on the HIP-3 platform were able to accurately track the movement of the CME E-mini S&P 500 futures, down to the minute.

Although the on-chain perpetual contract was about 50–70 points lower than the ES, the magnitude of the price movement was similar.

What This Means

For decades, traditional markets have been bundled and controlled venues (exchanges), time (trading sessions), and products (indices/contracts).

They chose to maintain the status quo because they failed to establish mechanisms to address inefficiencies such as time delays, trading hour restrictions, and regulatory constraints on non-U.S. investors. Instead, they掩盖了 these inefficiencies and packaged them into procedural systems designed to build trusted institutions to attract investors.

People still trade and invest. This is not because they are stupid, or because they believe the rhetoric peddled by traditional financial markets. They do it because they have no choice. This began to change with the advent of blockchain, which provided the world with on-chain markets, making trading and investing easier than ever before.

People saw this choice and seized it.

They didn't care in the past, and they won't care in the future about changes in market structure. They also don't care whether the new structure is bundled or unbundled. As long as traders and investors can more easily express their opinions through financial instruments, they will embrace the new market structure, whether existing institutions like it or not. It doesn't matter if this structure comes from traditional giants like Nasdaq, Cboe, or S&P 500, or from a permissionless platform running on a blockchain.

The financial industry continues to evolve as it always has, and will adopt any structure that narrows the gap between the occurrence of an event and the expression of price opinion.

Important events are happening all over the world, every hour of the day. So why should prices have to wait until a clock starts ticking on a Monday morning in a glass-walled building in New York before they are determined?

Preguntas relacionadas

QWhat is the main argument presented in the article about the traditional structure of financial markets?

AThe article argues that the traditional, bundled structure of financial markets—which includes fixed trading hours, centralized exchanges, and specific product offerings—is becoming obsolete. It posits that capital seeks the fastest path to price information and that market participants will not tolerate inefficiencies, leading to an unbundled future with 24/7 trading across various venues and asset wrappers.

QWhat recent developments does the author cite as evidence of the shift towards an unbundled market structure?

AThe author cites three key developments: 1) S&P Dow Jones Indices licensing the S&P 500 to Trade[XYZ] for a perpetual derivatives contract on the Hyperliquid exchange. 2) The SEC approving Nasdaq's application to trade and settle some stocks in a tokenized form. 3) Cboe Global Markets submitting a proposal to the SEC for near 24x5 trading of U.S. stocks.

QHow does the article use the performance of Hyperliquid's HIP-3 market to support its thesis?

AThe article points to the massive growth of Hyperliquid's HIP-3 market, which saw a cumulative trading volume increase of $72 billion in just one month. It highlights that a majority of this volume is in perpetual contracts for traditional assets like silver, oil, and stock indices, demonstrating that traders are rapidly adopting new, unbundled platforms that offer 24/7 access, lower friction, and unified trading for both crypto and traditional assets.

QAccording to the article, what is a major historical reason traditional markets maintained their bundled structure?

AThe article suggests that traditional markets maintained their bundled structure not because it was the most efficient, but because they failed to build mechanisms to solve inherent inefficiencies like time delays, trading hour restrictions, and regulatory limits for non-U.S. investors. Instead, they masked these inefficiencies by packaging them as procedural rituals designed to create an aura of trust and institutional reliability.

QWhat fundamental force does the author identify as the driver behind the move to unbundle markets?

AThe author identifies 'financial gravity' as the fundamental force. This is the idea that capital, like water, will always find the path of least resistance and fastest access to price information. Market participants will naturally migrate to any structure that minimizes the gap between when an event occurs and when a price opinion can be expressed, regardless of whether it comes from a legacy institution or a new, permissionless platform.

Lecturas Relacionadas

This Week's Key Events Preview | U.S. to Release April CPI Data; U.S. Senate Banking Committee to Review "Digital Asset Market Structure Act of 2025"

Weekly News Preview: Key events for May 12-16 include major economic and crypto industry developments. On Tuesday, May 12, the U.S. will release its April CPI data. Additionally, the gaming blockchain Ronin will begin a 10-hour migration to an Ethereum Layer 2, built on OP Stack with EigenDA for data availability. This aims to leverage Ethereum's security and settle RON's annual inflation below 1%. Base's first independent network upgrade, "Base Azul," is scheduled for mainnet activation on Wednesday, May 13, focusing on security, performance, and developer experience enhancements. Thursday, May 14, sees the U.S. Senate Banking Committee voting on the "Digital Asset Market Structure Act of 2025." In other news, Solana DeFi protocol Carrot will shut down, setting a final withdrawal deadline due to impacts from the Drift exploit. The Moscow Exchange will launch futures trading for Solana, Ripple, and Tron indices (RUB-settled) for qualified investors. Multiple service closures are scheduled for Friday, May 15. Dmail Network will begin winding down due to unsustainable infrastructure costs and failed commercialization. Users must export data before this date. Separately, the Cosmos-based lending blockchain UX Chain will fully shut down. Finally, on Saturday, May 16, gaming infrastructure provider Lattice will wind down operations, with its Redstone Layer 2 network ceasing. Users are urged to withdraw assets, especially from contracts like Uniswap pools, before the shutdown.

链捕手Hace 52 min(s)

This Week's Key Events Preview | U.S. to Release April CPI Data; U.S. Senate Banking Committee to Review "Digital Asset Market Structure Act of 2025"

链捕手Hace 52 min(s)

Morning Post | Trump Media Group Releases Q1 Financial Report; Top Three DeFi Applications Return Nearly $100 Million in Revenue to Token Holders in 30 Days; Michael Saylor Shares Bitcoin Tracker Info Again

**Title: Daily Briefing | Trump Media Group Releases Q1 Report; Top 3 DeFi Apps Return Nearly $100M to Token Holders; Michael Saylor Signals Potential Bitcoin Buy** **Summary:** Key developments in the past 24 hours include: * **Economic Outlook:** Goldman Sachs has pushed back its forecast for the next two Federal Reserve interest rate cuts to December 2026 and March 2027, citing persistent inflationary pressures from energy costs. This delayed timeline is expected to tighten liquidity flow into risk assets, including cryptocurrencies. * **DeFi & Revenue:** Data from DefiLlama shows that three leading DeFi applications—Hyperliquid, Pump.fun, and EdgeX—collectively distributed $96.3 million in revenue to their token holders over the last 30 days. This trend highlights a shift in the crypto community's focus towards real protocol earnings and sustainable economic models. * **Corporate Bitcoin Moves:** Michael Saylor, founder of MicroStrategy (note: referred to as 'Strategy' in the text, likely a typographical error), has signaled potential upcoming Bitcoin purchases by posting a "Bitcoin Tracker" update, following a pattern that typically precedes the company's official disclosure of new acquisitions. * **Market Integrity:** Prediction market platform Polymarket announced updates to address platform issues, including identifying and banning clusters of accounts involved in "ghost-fill" activities and implementing measures to prevent bulk account creation. * **Regulation:** The Bank of England Governor warned that stablecoin regulation could lead to tensions between US and international regulators. In South Korea, the National Tax Service has launched a pilot program to entrust seized virtual assets to private custody firms for management. * **Meme Token Trends:** GMGN data lists the top trending meme tokens on Ethereum (e.g., HEX, SHIB), Solana (e.g., FWOG, TROLL), and Base (e.g., SKITTEN, PEPE) over the past day. **Financial Note:** Trump Media & Technology Group reported a Q1 loss of approximately $4 billion, primarily attributed to unrealized losses on its Bitcoin and other digital asset holdings.

链捕手Hace 1 hora(s)

Morning Post | Trump Media Group Releases Q1 Financial Report; Top Three DeFi Applications Return Nearly $100 Million in Revenue to Token Holders in 30 Days; Michael Saylor Shares Bitcoin Tracker Info Again

链捕手Hace 1 hora(s)

Telegram Takes Direct Control of TON, Social Traffic Rewrites the Public Chain Narrative

Telegram founder Pavel Durov announced that Telegram will replace the TON Foundation as the core driver and largest validator of The Open Network (TON). Key initiatives include a sixfold reduction in transaction fees, performance upgrades, and improved developer tools within the next few weeks. This marks a strategic shift from Telegram merely providing user access to deeply integrating TON into its platform's core infrastructure. The goal is to transform Telegram's massive social traffic into sustainable on-chain activity. While viral mini-apps like Notcoin have demonstrated Telegram's ability to drive user adoption, TON aims to support frequent, low-value transactions inherent to social platforms—such as tipping, in-app payments, and game rewards. Ultra-low fees and sub-second finality (0.6 seconds) are crucial to making blockchain interactions seamless and nearly invisible within the Telegram user experience. However, Telegram's increased central role raises questions about network decentralization. Durov argues that Telegram's participation will attract more large validators, thereby enhancing decentralization. TON also offers high annual staking rewards (18.8%), aiming to retain capital within its ecosystem. The fundamental challenge for TON is no longer leveraging Telegram's user base, but becoming an indispensable, seamless infrastructure layer for Telegram's everyday applications—moving from an adjacent chain to an embedded utility.

marsbitHace 1 hora(s)

Telegram Takes Direct Control of TON, Social Traffic Rewrites the Public Chain Narrative

marsbitHace 1 hora(s)

Telegram Takes Direct Control of TON, Social Traffic Reshapes Public Chain Narrative

Telegram's founder, Pavel Durov, has announced a major shift in the development of The Open Network (TON). Telegram will now become the core driver of TON, replacing the TON Foundation and becoming its largest validator. The focus will be on technical upgrades over the next few weeks, including slashing network fees by six times to near-zero and improving finality time to 0.6 seconds. This move signifies a deeper integration between Telegram and TON, moving beyond just providing a user base. The goal is to transform Telegram's vast social traffic and built-in features—like Mini Apps, payments, and bots—into sustainable, on-chain usage scenarios. The reduced fees and faster speeds are crucial for enabling the small, frequent transactions typical of social interactions. While this promises stronger execution and product alignment, it raises questions about centralization. Durov argues Telegram's involvement will attract more validators, enhancing decentralization, but the outcome remains to be seen. Additionally, TON's high annual staking reward of 18.8% aims to retain capital within the ecosystem. The key challenge for TON is no longer just leveraging Telegram's entry point, but becoming an invisible, seamless infrastructure layer within Telegram's daily use. Its success hinges on converting viral attention into lasting, embedded utility.

Odaily星球日报Hace 1 hora(s)

Telegram Takes Direct Control of TON, Social Traffic Reshapes Public Chain Narrative

Odaily星球日报Hace 1 hora(s)

Trading

Spot
Futuros
活动图片