NYSE Owner ICE Chief Says Hyperliquid Is Bigger Than Nasdaq With 11 People
Intercontinental Exchange founder and CEO Jeffrey Sprecher has put Hyperliquid directly into the conversation about how fast crypto-native markets are challenging traditional exchange infrastructure.
Speaking at Bernstein’s 42nd Annual Strategic Decisions Conference, the ICE chief highlighted the scale and efficiency of Hyperliquid while discussing competition, market infrastructure and the number of new fortunes being created in digital markets. ICE owns the New York Stock Exchange, which makes the comparison especially striking.
Sprecher said Hyperliquid is “bigger than NASDAQ,” then added: “It’s 11 people.”
Those two lines captured the point. A crypto exchange built by a tiny team can now generate enough trading activity, market attention and wealth creation to be mentioned by the head of one of the world’s most important exchange operators. That is not a normal endorsement or a casual crypto reference. It is a legacy-market executive acknowledging that decentralized and crypto-native trading platforms are no longer side experiments.
Hyperliquid has grown around perpetual futures, spot trading, portfolio margin and a fast onchain order-book experience. Its rise has been even more visible because HYPE has become one of the strongest tokens in the current market, recently hitting new highs against BTC, ETH and SOL.
HYPE Strength Turns Infrastructure Into A Market Story
The timing of Sprecher’s comments lands during a powerful HYPE cycle. A Galaxy Digital-labeled wallet recently moved $30 million in HYPE to exchanges after withdrawing a larger staked position, showing that institutional-sized holders are now active around the token’s strongest relative move.
That creates a more complex market setup. On one side, Hyperliquid is earning rare recognition from a legacy exchange leader. On the other, HYPE’s rally is now large enough that profit-taking, exchange deposits and crowded momentum positioning matter more. Strong projects can still face sharp reversals when early holders begin moving tokens after a major breakout.
The bigger story is market structure. Hyperliquid shows how crypto exchanges can scale with smaller teams, faster product cycles and native token incentives while traditional exchanges still rely on heavier regulatory, clearing, data and corporate infrastructure. ICE and Nasdaq remain deeply embedded in global finance, but Hyperliquid proves that crypto-native liquidity can form around a very different operating model.
For Hyperliquid, the next test is whether volume, open interest and token demand stay strong after the latest attention wave. If HYPE holds its relative breakout while the platform continues adding users and liquidity, Sprecher’s comparison may become one of the clearest legacy-finance signals that crypto-native exchanges have entered the main market infrastructure debate.





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