How Hyperliquid Managed to Lead 3 DeFi Apps That Paid Holders $96 Million In 4 Weeks
Three young DeFi applications, Hyperliquid, Pump.fun and edgeX, returned $96.3 million to token holders in 30 days. The figure marks one of the largest concentrated payouts from any DeFi cohort tracked in 2026.
Each protocol used a different mechanism to deliver the cash. Only Hyperliquid funded its full payout from trading fees alone. Pump.fun split revenue with operations, and edgeX paid out roughly three times what it earned.
The DeFi Shift From Emissions to Real Revenue
During the past cycle, DeFi protocols rewarded users by minting tokens and distributing them through liquidity programs. The model inflated supply faster than demand, leaving holders to absorb relentless dilution.
Hyperliquid (HYPE), Pump.fun (PUMP) and edgeX (EDGE) sit at the front of a different cohort. They generate fees from active products and route part of those fees back to holders through buybacks or burns. Token supply is treated as something to defend, not expand.
DefiLlama’s holder revenue rankings show the three accounted for the majority of monthly holder cash flow.
The categories tracked include perpetual trading and meme coin issuance. Their combined $96.3 million came in over a stretch when the broader DeFi sector saw flat fee growth.
How Each Protocol Got to the Number
Hyperliquid produced $50.95 million in protocol revenue across the 30-day window. The platform channeled the full amount to HYPE holders, the largest absolute payout in the group. Spending on user incentives was zero, an unusually clean ratio for a perpetual exchange of its size.
The Assistance Fund handles the routing. Launched in January 2025, the fund captures 97% of trading fees. It uses them to repurchase HYPE on the open market through automated Layer 1 execution.
A validator proposal in December 2025 sought to mark roughly $920 million in fund-held HYPE as permanently retired. If passed, the burn would tighten HYPE supply at the structural level.
Pump.fun returned $22.09 million to PUMP holders out of $38.81 million in protocol revenue. The Solana token launchpad ran a 100% buyback policy for nine months.
It switched to a 50/50 split on April 28, 2026. Half of net fees now feed an automated buy-and-burn routed through an irreversible smart contract. The shift coincides with the strongest user-side data the platform has ever produced.
edgeX is the outlier. The perpetual exchange paid $23.26 million to EDGE holders against just $8.26 million in protocol revenue.
The ratio suggests the team is drawing on reserves or pre-launch incentive budgets to keep payouts elevated. The EDGE token went live on March 31, 2026. The project remains in the early phase of its tokenomics rollout.
The Sustainability Question
Hyperliquid’s model is the most defensible. Its payouts scale directly with trading fees. A slow trading month would shrink holder distributions rather than force the protocol into the red.
Critics inside the perp DEX category flag concentration risk. A single product line still drives the bulk of revenue.
Pump.fun’s case is more contested. Analysts argue that after burning roughly $370 million in PUMP, the token still failed to track its revenue base. Critics call the valuation narrative-driven rather than cash-flow driven.
A new study from CoinGecko complicates that read. The data firm found that 73.3% of Pump.fun traders booked realized gains in April 2026.
The figure is up from a 30.1% trough in June 2025. It reverses two straight years of net losses for active users. Active wallets have rebounded to 3.14 million from a December 2025 low of 1.8 million.
The gains were small. About 65.1% of profitable wallets earned between $1 and $500 for the month, and only 5.4% cleared $1,000. Even so, the user base now skews toward repeat traders rather than first-time speculators. That audience historically drove churn at the platform.
edgeX’s gap between revenue and payout is the cleanest red flag. Subsidized distributions can attract early holders but the math only works while reserves last.
The protocol must lift fee generation fast enough to cover its EDGE buy pressure. That is the central question for token holders heading into the second half of 2026.
The $96.3 million payout marks a meaningful shift in how DeFi rewards holders. Only Hyperliquid funded the full distribution from organic fee revenue.
Pump.fun’s case rests on a still-young trader recovery. edgeX has yet to prove its math works without subsidies.
The post How Hyperliquid Managed to Lead 3 DeFi Apps That Paid Holders $96 Million In 4 Weeks appeared first on BeInCrypto.
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