Capital Flow / FinTech & Future Assets

Blockchain.com Launches Self-Custodied Perpetual Futures Trading in Its Non-Custodial DeFi Wallet, Integrated with Hyperliquid, Supporting BTC Collateral and Up to 40x Leverage

According to cross-verification across three sources, Blockchain.com has rolled out perpetual futures trading inside its non-custodial/self-custody DeFi wallet, powered by Hyperliquid. Users can use BTC as collateral and trade high-leverage perpetual contracts directly in the wallet, covering more than 190 markets with leverage of up to 40x. The three sources agree on the core facts, with differences mainly in wording and the level of detail.

TSO brief

  • According to cross-verification across three sources, Blockchain.com has rolled out perpetual futures trading inside its non-custodial/self-custody DeFi wallet, powered by Hyperliquid. Users can use BTC as collateral and trade high-leverage perpetual contracts directly in the wallet, covering more than 190 markets with leverage of up to 40x. The three sources agree on the core facts, with differences mainly in wording and the level of detail.
  • Capital Flow · FinTech & Future Assets
  • Apr 22, 2026
TSO noteEach article is checked against independent reporting. The original source links are listed with the analysis so readers can inspect the evidence directly.

Source transparency

Original reporting sources

  1. Blockchain.com Launches Global Self-Custodied Perpetual Futures Trading - PR Newswire UKwww.prnewswire.co.uk
  2. Blockchain.com Launches Global Self-Custodied Perpetual Futures Trading - Chainwirechainwire.org
  3. Blockchain.com brings perpetual futures to self-custody wallet users - crypto.newscrypto.news

Top three-source views and TSO verification conclusion:

  • Source 1 (PR Newswire UK) says Blockchain.com announced on April 21, 2026, that it had rolled out perpetual futures trading in its non-custodial DeFi wallet, powered by Hyperliquid, allowing users to participate directly with BTC funds, covering 190+ crypto markets and offering leverage of up to 40x.

  • Source 2 (Chainwire) says Blockchain.com announced on April 21, 2026, that it had launched perpetual futures trading in its non-custodial DeFi wallet, emphasizing that users can enter high-leverage markets directly from their own wallet with no contract expiry, and likewise noting Hyperliquid support, 190+ markets, and up to 40x leverage.

  • Source 3 (crypto.news) says Blockchain.com has added perpetual futures trading to its non-custody DeFi wallet, allowing users to trade leveraged crypto contracts without moving funds to a separate exchange while keeping assets self-custodied throughout execution; it also mentions Bitcoin collateral via Hyperliquid and broader market coverage.

  • TSO verification conclusion: The three sources mutually confirm that Blockchain.com has launched or added perpetual futures trading inside its non-custodial/self-custody wallet, supported by Hyperliquid, with BTC/Bitcoin collateral and leveraged contract trading. The conclusions are consistent and can be cross-verified.

Commonly confirmed facts:

  1. Blockchain.com has introduced a perpetual futures trading feature for its non-custodial/self-custody DeFi wallet.

  2. The feature is powered by Hyperliquid.

  3. Users can trade leveraged contracts directly inside the wallet.

  4. Sources 1 and 2 explicitly state coverage of 190+ crypto markets and leverage of up to 40x.

  5. Source 3 confirms that users can use Bitcoin/BTC as collateral and trade while remaining self-custodied.

Main differences or discrepancies:

  1. Different launch wording: Source 1 uses “rollout,” Source 2 uses “announced today the rollout,” and Source 3 uses “has added.”

  2. Wallet description differs slightly: Sources 1 and 2 say “non-custodial DeFi wallet,” while Source 3 says “self-custody wallet users” and “non-custodial DeFi wallet.”

  3. Market count and leverage cap: Sources 1 and 2 explicitly give “190+ Crypto Markets” and “up to 40x leverage,” while Source 3 only says “more markets” and does not provide specific numbers.

  4. “No contract expiry” is mentioned only by Source 2; the other two sources do not mention it.

Background and analysis:

  • Based on the three sources, this update appears to embed perpetual futures trading into Blockchain.com’s self-custody wallet experience rather than requiring users to move assets to a separate exchange.

  • Sources 1 and 2 provide more complete product parameters, suggesting the feature focuses on direct in-wallet trading, BTC funding access, broad market coverage, and relatively high leverage; Source 3 places greater emphasis on self-custody and on trading without leaving the wallet.

  • Because the supplied sources are press-release/republished-style materials, the deeper business rationale, regulatory arrangements, regional restrictions, user eligibility, and risk disclosures cannot be confirmed from the provided material.

  • It is also not possible to confirm whether the feature is available in all regions at once or being rolled out in phases; the sources do not say.

Three-source summary:

  • Source 1: Blockchain.com announced perpetual futures trading in its non-custodial DeFi wallet, powered by Hyperliquid, supporting BTC funding, 190+ markets, and up to 40x leverage.

  • Source 2: Blockchain.com announced perpetual futures trading in its non-custodial DeFi wallet, letting users enter high-leverage markets directly from their wallet with no expiry, powered by Hyperliquid, covering 190+ markets and up to 40x leverage.

  • Source 3: Blockchain.com has added perpetual futures trading for self-custody wallet users, enabling leveraged contract trading with Bitcoin collateral through Hyperliquid while keeping assets self-custodied.

Conclusion:
Taken together, the three sources can mutually verify the core fact that Blockchain.com has launched perpetual futures trading in its non-custodial/self-custody DeFi wallet. As for market count, leverage, and no-expiry details, only Sources 1 and 2 state them explicitly, while Source 3 does not. Any other details not present in the sources cannot be confirmed from the provided material.

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