Validators to Decide Who Issues the Hyperliquid USDH Stablecoin as Paxos, Frax and Agora–MoonPay Vie

Validators will vote Sept 14 on who issues the Hyperliquid USDH stablecoin. Paxos, Frax and an Agora–MoonPay coalition vie amid concerns over Stripe ties.

Hyperliquid validators will vote on Sept. 14 to decide which provider will issue a new native stablecoin, USDH — a decision that could shift how the exchange sources liquidity and capture significant treasury yields. The outcome matters because USDH could displace roughly $5.5 billion of USDC currently used on the platform and generate hundreds of millions in revenue from U.S. Treasury yields.

Competing bids include regulated issuer Paxos, DeFi-native issuer Frax, and a coalition led by Agora with support from payment processor MoonPay. Paxos proposes directing 95% of reserve earnings into HYPE token buybacks and leans on its regulatory track record. Frax is pitching a user-first model that passes 100% of Treasury yield back to users. Agora’s coalition emphasizes neutrality and alignment with Hyperliquid’s community, pledging 100% of net revenue to HYPE buybacks or the platform’s Assistance Fund.

The most contentious element centers on a proposal tied to Stripe’s Bridge platform and the company’s Tempo blockchain efforts. Critics — including Agora CEO Nick van Eck — warn that awarding issuance to a provider with built-in payments and wallet infrastructure could create conflicts of interest and concentrate economic control with a potential competitor.

MoonPay’s president highlighted his firm’s licensing footprint and verified user base as reasons to prefer the Agora-backed option, calling for “scale, credibility and alignment” over what he framed as capture by a single vendor.

Hyperliquid set a Sept. 10 proposal cutoff and said the Hyperliquid Foundation will effectively abstain, leaving the decision to validators. Given Hyperliquid’s near-80% share of DeFi derivatives processing, the winner stands to gain both steady yield revenue and influence over the platform’s monetary layer.

What to watch: the validator vote outcome, how selection affects USDC exposure on the platform, and whether governance chooses neutrality or a partner with deep payments integration — a choice with regulatory and centralization risks.

Source: CoinDesk. Read the original coverage for full details.

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