Oil: When DeFi becomes the only open market amid geopolitical shocks

With global exchanges shut over the weekend, DeFi briefly became the market’s only real-time gauge of Middle East oil risk.

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The latest flare-up in Middle East tensions has once again underscored a structural lag in traditional commodities markets when geopolitical shocks hit. Over a weekend marked by strikes on energy infrastructure and rising tensions in the Strait of Hormuz, oil went through a sharp bout of price discovery that closed, legacy venues were unable to capture.

With refineries in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Iraq impacted, the closure of London and New York left institutional investors with little ability to adjust positions. Crude reportedly climbed as high as $119 a barrel in off-market indications before easing back toward $101. During that window, part of the price-formation process shifted to decentralised finance (DeFi) rails.

The Hyperliquid case

With liquidity scarce in traditional markets, the CL/USDC pair (crude oil futures versus USDC) on Hyperliquid (via TradeXYZ’s HIP-3 market) served as a real-time stress indicator. Weekend data suggest that, when a “force majeure” event occurs outside banking hours, some capital migrates on-chain.

  • Trading volume: $1.05bn over 24 hours, making it the platform’s third most active pair.
  • Open interest: $186m, ranking oil sixth by total exposure on the DEX.
  • Liquidations: $65m over 24 hours (16.8% of platform-wide liquidations), following a pullback amid rumours of an emergency reserve release by the G7.

Activity was fuelled by Kuwait’s force majeure declaration, tightening perceived supply risk. For asset managers, the ability to hedge or exit during such an episode is no longer a theoretical, tech-forward debate. It is basic risk management.

The 24/7 question

The shift of part of commodities exposure to on-chain venues echoes what has recently been observed in tokenised gold. DeFi’s selling point is increasingly continuous availability rather than decentralisation per se.

From a regulatory and operational standpoint, this trend challenges established market infrastructure. If DeFi remains, on some weekends, among the few venues open during major geopolitical episodes, pressure on traditional exchanges to move toward continuous trading is likely to build.

That said, the volatility seen in CL/USDC, including $65m in liquidations, is a reminder of the risks that come with thinner liquidity outside usual hours.

The Big Whale’s take

DeFi markets provide a trading channel when legacy markets are closed, particularly during bouts of geopolitically driven volatility.

On products such as the futures traded on Hyperliquid, that can allow faster reaction to price-moving headlines, such as Kuwait’s force majeure declaration, while exposing participants to the automated liquidation dynamics typical of these venues.

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Aleksandar Bukovski

Aleksandar Bukovski is an analyst at The Big Whale, specializing in decentralized finance and crypto-assets.

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