TradingView adds 24/7 Hyperliquid and Trade[XYZ] real-time data via Supercharts

TradingView has added real-time market data for Hyperliquid and Trade[XYZ] to its charting platform, extending onchain perpetual and spot coverage beyond crypto to cross-asset markets. The integration brings live pricing for Hyperliquid’s crypto perpetual and spot markets through TradingView’s Supercharts, enabling traders to follow price action around the clock—even when traditional venues are closed. TradingView says Hyperliquid instruments appear under the HYPERLIQUID symbol prefix, while Trade[XYZ] listings can be found using the HIP3XYZ prefix in symbol search. This lets traders monitor perpetual contracts and spot assets from a single interface without leaving TradingView. The rollout follows regulatory attention in Singapore: days earlier, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) placed Hyperliquid on its Investor Alert List, covering both the Hyper Foundation website and the Hyperliquid trading application. MAS stressed the listing is a consumer-protection measure and does not constitute a ban or enforcement action. Hyperliquid said it never claimed MAS licensing. From a market context, Hyperliquid is described as one of the largest decentralized exchanges by trading volume (CoinGecko: 6th by DEX volume). DefiLlama estimates the protocol secures about $5.76B in total value locked (TVL). For traders, TradingView’s new Hyperliquid and Trade[XYZ] feeds improve visibility and convenience for derivatives and spot price discovery, but the nearby MAS alert keeps headline and risk sentiment sensitive.
Neutral
This is broadly neutral for price direction. On the one hand, the TradingView integration improves accessibility of Hyperliquid perpetuals and spot pricing via Supercharts, which typically supports liquidity discovery, tighter spreads (when volume is present), and more consistent chart-based participation—often a mild, market-supportive effect. On the other hand, the timing matters: the rollout comes days after MAS placed Hyperliquid on its Investor Alert List. While MAS said it is not a ban or enforcement action, such headlines can still trigger short-term caution among retail and risk-managed funds, potentially dampening speculative inflows. Historically, similar “data/venue accessibility upgrades” (exchange or aggregator integrations) tend to boost trading activity gradually once users route orders through better tooling. But regulatory alerts near the same window can offset that by shifting flows toward safer venues or reducing leverage appetite. Net effect: improved monitoring and likely steady engagement for traders, without a clear, immediate bullish or bearish catalyst strong enough to dominate the tape over the very short term.