BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes purchased about $2.2 million of Synapse (SYN) tokens, sending the token up 27.78% to $0.383 as he threw his weight behind Hypercall, an onchain options exchange built on Hyperliquid that he says could challenge Deribit's dominance in crypto derivatives.
"Hypercall is the first onchain options exchange that can actually compete with Deribit on latency and liquidity," Hayes said in a social media post following the trade. The BitMEX co-founder also retweeted bullish analysis of SYN, amplifying retail attention around the token.
The transaction was executed through Flowdesk, a Paris-based OTC desk, roughly an hour before on-chain analytics firm Onchain Lens flagged the wallet on June 29. The wallet, linked to Hayes through consistent on-chain patterns and prior interactions, acquired 6.16 million SYN tokens in a single block trade designed to minimize market slippage. SYN's trading volume spiked sharply after the disclosure, according to CoinMarketCap data.
The purchase signals growing conviction in onchain derivatives infrastructure as an alternative to centralized exchanges. Deribit currently commands more than 85 percent of the crypto options market, but Hypercall's integration within the Hyperliquid ecosystem — a high-throughput L1 built for perpetuals and spot trading — offers a vertically integrated alternative. For Synapse, a cross-chain interoperability protocol that bridges Ethereum, Arbitrum, Optimism, and BNB Chain, Hayes's endorsement could drive renewed interest from institutional and retail traders, though the wallet's ownership remains unconfirmed and broader market conditions still present downside risk.
Hypercall's Edge Over Deribit
Hypercall operates as a fully onchain options exchange within the Hyperliquid ecosystem, offering settlement transparency that Deribit, as a centralized platform, cannot match. The protocol uses Hyperliquid's order-book infrastructure to achieve sub-second latency, addressing the historical criticism that onchain options cannot compete with centralized venues on speed. If Hypercall captures even a fraction of Deribit's volume, the demand for SYN — which serves as the governance and utility token for the Synapse bridge — could see structural growth as traders move funds across chains to access the platform.
What Comes Next
Hayes's $2.2 million position now sits in an on-chain wallet, with the tokens moved shortly after the OTC settlement. Technical indicators on the four-hour chart show SYN trading inside Bollinger Bands with upper resistance at $0.43, while the 50-period exponential moving average at $0.30 and the 200-period EMA at $0.16 provide layered support. The MACD has printed a golden cross, confirming bullish momentum, though the relative strength index at 56.19 leaves room before overbought conditions, pointing to potential consolidation above the 50-EMA before a continuation move.
The broader altcoin market has shown mixed signals this week, with some low-cap tokens like Velvet rallying 235 percent while others such as MemeCore fell 70 percent. Bitcoin's recovery from a $59,000 low on June 26 has helped stabilize sentiment, but macroeconomic uncertainty continues to weigh on risk assets. For SYN holders, the key catalyst to watch is whether Hypercall announces a public mainnet launch date or any integration with Synapse's bridge infrastructure — either event could provide the next leg for the token.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.