Katana ties KAT token value to perp trading revenue after IDEX deal, strengthening its position in derivatives markets.
Katana has acquired decentralized exchange IDEX in a move that ties a live perpetuals venue directly to its growing blockchain network. The deal gives Katana control over exchange infrastructure, fee generation, and a product category that has become one of crypto’s biggest revenue sources. It also shifts the role of the KAT token, which now sits closer to a business line with direct trading activity.
IDEX Acquisition Strengthens Katana’s Push Into Decentralized Derivatives
In a move to expand its trading capabilities, Katana has acquired IDEX, a long-standing on-chain infrastructure team. The protocol has also launched Katana Perps, its native perpetual futures platform.
According to an X article, the acquisition brings almost a decade of exchange infrastructure into its stack. IDEX built its name as one of Ethereum’s earliest active decentralized exchanges and later focused on hybrid trading design.
That operating history, along with a clean security record, gives Katana a tested base for its newly launched perpetuals platform. Meanwhile, Katana Perps is already live and launched with support from market participants including GSR, Auros, and Selini.
The involvement of those platforms matters because institutional firms usually screen venues for uptime, execution quality, and custody risk before committing capital. Early support gives Katana a stronger opening than many new decentralized derivatives platforms receive.
A central piece of Katana’s pitch is its native yield system, called Vault Bridge. Katana says each dollar of USDC bridged onto the network generates ongoing yield from the underlying asset. Because Katana owns the perpetual exchange outright, that yield can be directed into exchange incentives instead of relying mainly on token rewards.
Moreover, the model aims to fix a common problem in perpetual DEX launches. Many platforms attract traders with token emissions and airdrops, then struggle once those rewards fade. Liquidity often drops and volumes weaken after the initial campaign ends.
Katana argues its structure creates a more durable source of support for market depth, maker participation, and taker rewards.
KAT Gains Revenue Link as Platform Integrates Perps Into Core Stack
Notably, growth in deposits expands incentives for Katana Perps, tying funding directly to network activity and exchange growth. The platform is positioned as the core economic engine of the stack.
For KAT holders, this matters as perp DEXs remain the top revenue segment. The article cited the January 2026 industry volume of $739 billion for perp DEXs.
Before the acquisition, KAT largely represented a DeFi-focused layer-2 network. Such tokens often trade at lower valuations than assets tied more directly to revenue-producing applications.
With Katana now owning the exchange, fee generation from Katana Perps can flow back into the network. This will in turn support liquidity, growth, and the token’s wider economic case.
In addition, the direct tie may also shape how investors compare KAT with other exchange-linked tokens. Katana pointed to Hyperliquid as proof that markets assign higher value to tokens closer to trading revenue.
While Katana is still much earlier in its development, the IDEX deal gives it a clearer path to that kind of narrative. In July, Katana launched its public mainnet following its spinout from Polygon Labs.
The network operates on a customized OP Stack implementation, cdk-opgeth, and connects to the wider Polygon ecosystem via AggLayer. Early integrations with Sushi and the perpetuals platform Vertex reflect Katana’s focus on building a DeFi-centric network strategy.
IDEX’s native token fell sharply last week after Binance said it would delist the token’s spot trading pairs. At the time of writing, IDEX traded near $0.0042.


