The Hyper Foundation has introduced a high-impact governance proposal aimed at restoring confidence in the HYPE token after a sharp price decline. Announced on December 17, the plan calls for burning all HYPE tokens held in the protocol’s Assistance Fund, a move that would permanently reduce both circulating and total supply.
HYPE has fallen more than 50% over recent months, reflecting broader volatility across digital asset markets and heightened scrutiny of token economics. The proposed burn is designed to address these concerns directly by removing a large pool of inactive tokens from the system.
At the center of the proposal is the Assistance Fund, a core mechanism within Hyperliquid’s Layer 1 design. Trading fees generated on the platform are automatically converted into HYPE tokens and sent to a system-controlled address with no private key. As a result, the tokens stored there are effectively locked unless a protocol-level change is made.
If validators approve the measure, approximately 37 million HYPE tokens currently held in the Assistance Fund—nearly 13% of circulating supply—would be permanently destroyed.
Validator Vote Shapes Token Economics
The outcome of the proposal now rests with Hyperliquid validators, who will determine whether the Assistance Fund tokens are formally removed from circulation. A “Yes” vote would establish consensus that these assets are inaccessible and should never be reintroduced through future upgrades.
The Hyper Foundation has emphasized that the vote would also set a long-term governance precedent, committing the network to never authorizing changes that could unlock the tokens.
Key governance milestones include:
- Validator statements due by December 21 at 04:00 UTC
- User delegation window open until December 24 at 04:00 UTC
- Final decision based on stake-weighted consensus at vote close
Several validators, including Kinetiq x Hyperion, have already publicly supported the burn. Their backing has added momentum to the proposal as the deadline approaches.
Market Reaction and Broader Catalysts

Market response has been cautiously positive. Following the announcement, HYPE rose 2% to trade near $26.66, with intraday prices ranging between $26.21 and $28.02. While spot trading volume slipped 5% over 24 hours, derivatives activity surged, signaling growing speculative interest.
Data from CoinGlass shows total HYPE futures open interest rising 3% to $1.52 billion, with notable gains across major venues, including CME and Binance. Short-term open interest increased nearly 4% on four-hour charts, reflecting renewed positioning around the vote.
Beyond the burn, attention is also turning to institutional exposure. Bitwise recently amended its S-1 filing for a U.S.-listed spot Hyperliquid ETF, revealing a 0.67% management fee and the ticker symbol BHYP.
Together, the proposed burn and ETF momentum are reshaping sentiment. While risks remain, reducing supply by double-digit percentages could materially alter HYPE’s long-term valuation dynamics if validator approval is secured.


