Decentralized exchange PancakeSwap ($CAKE) on 15 May launched a new perpetual futures trading platform that replaces its previous liquidity pool-based model with a full order book system, positioning it to compete more directly with leaders such as Hyperliquid in the rapidly expanding onchain derivatives sector.
PancakeSwap ranks among the largest decentralized exchanges in crypto. It primarily operates on BNB Chain – the blockchain network developed by Binance – while also supporting trading across multiple blockchains.
The upgraded platform shifts away from the protocol’s earlier oracle-based pricing and pooled liquidity approach. Traders can now place buy and sell orders directly at specific price levels through a full order book system powered by Aster, a next-generation decentralized perpetuals infrastructure provider that delivers centralized exchange (CEX)-level execution speed while maintaining onchain transparency and noncustodial asset control.
Perpetual futures, often called perps, are leveraged trading products that allow participants to speculate on whether a cryptocurrency’s price will rise (long position) or fall (short position) without owning the underlying asset. These contracts do not expire.
Why order book matters
The transition to a full order book model improves capital efficiency by reducing reliance on fragmented liquidity pools. This typically results in tighter spreads and lower slippage – the difference between the expected price of a trade and the actual executed price. The change also enables more precise price discovery, which could attract larger professional and institutional traders.
Race for dominance
The launch arrives as competition in onchain derivatives – decentralized, blockchain-based futures trading – accelerates. Perpetual futures trading has emerged as one of the fastest-growing segments in decentralized finance (DeFi). Platforms such as Hyperliquid, a specialized decentralized perpetuals exchange built on its own Layer 1 blockchain (an independent base-layer network), now process billions of dollars in daily volume.
With PancakeSwap’s established user base and spot market dominance, the upgrade positions the protocol for potentially significant perps volume uplift in the coming weeks, provided liquidity migrates quickly.
New trader tools
PancakeSwap introduced a "Simple Mode" designed for newer traders. Users select a token, choose leverage (the amount of borrowed funds used to amplify positions), and a preset trade size, then open positions with one click.
The platform also offers a "Pro Mode" with advanced features including cross margin (shared collateral across positions) and isolated margin (risk limited to a single position), limit and stop orders, take-profit and stop-loss settings, plus full order book visibility. The system supports up to 200x leverage on major pairs.
Strong market position
PancakeSwap processed around $838.8mn in 24-hour trading volume and more than $23.4bn over the past 30 days as of 15 May, according to CoinGecko data. It ranks as the second-largest DEX overall, behind only Uniswap, the leading decentralized exchange known for its automated market maker model.
PancakeSwap’s native $CAKE token traded near $1.50 on 15 May, giving it a market capitalization of roughly $488mn. The protocol holds about $2.3bn in total value locked (TVL) – funds deposited by users into its smart contracts – and generates substantial annualized fees and revenue, according to DeFiLlama data.
Early post-launch metrics remain limited on day one, but the upgrade directly addresses previous slippage issues in the old model. Potential risks include temporary liquidity fragmentation during migration and standard onchain order book challenges such as front-running (where traders exploit visible orders ahead of execution). Aster’s infrastructure aims to mitigate these through optimized design and CEX-comparable performance.
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