
Solayer, a hardware-accelerated Layer 1 blockchain and Solana’s first restaking platform, has launched the mainnet of Margin Trade, its new on-chain perpetual trading platform
Margin Trade is a Solana native, on-chain perpetuals trading platform that aims to bridge crypto native on chain trading with traditional finance (TradFi) instruments in a unified environment, making it possible for users to trade different asset classes, including cryptocurrencies, commodities such as silver and gold, and synthetic equity indices, all in one place.
By leveraging Solayer’s low-latency InfiniSVM infrastructure, Margin Trade delivers high-performance on-chain trading, enabling traders to benefit from real-time trade execution, high throughput, low fees, full transparency, and self-custody of their assets.
“Most perpetual futures trading infrastructure today remains siloed across separate markets and fragmented collateral account structures,” said Joshua Sum, Solayer’s Chief Product Officer.
“Margin Trade is designed to bring capital efficiency, real-time execution, and multi-asset exposure into a unified environment that feels closer to the vision of truly global financial markets than traditional trading platforms.”
Margin Trade is being developed by a team of professionals, including former traders from leading financial institutions and crypto exchanges such as Citadel and Kraken. The platform combines the speed and efficiency of centralized exchanges with the transparency, permissionless nature, and self-custody principles of decentralized finance (DeFi).
Solayer, also known as Solayer Labs, is a blockchain infrastructure company building a next-generation execution layer for real-time financial applications. Its goal is to create on-chain infrastructure that matches or exceeds the speed and performance of traditional financial systems.
Since its launch in 2023, the Solayer team has raised $12 million in funding. The company has also launched InfiniSVM, a hardware-accelerated Layer 1 blockchain built on the Solana Virtual Machine (SVM). According to the company, the network is capable of achieving up to 1,000,000 transactions per second and throughput exceeding 100 Gbps.
Margie Feng, Solayer’s Head of Marketing, is also scheduled to speak at the upcoming Rare Evo 2026 conference, which will be held from July 28 to July 31 this year.

Solayer is making a very deliberate move into the next phase of its life.
The Solana-native project has launched the alpha version of its InfiniSVM mainnet and announced a $35 million ecosystem fund to bring builders, capital, and activity onto the network. Taken together, the message is clear. Solayer is no longer just experimenting on the edges of Solana, it is aiming to become a serious piece of high performance financial infrastructure.
For a project that started out focused on restaking, this is a notable pivot. And so far, it looks like a well-timed one.
Solayer first entered the picture as a restaking protocol on Solana, offering users a way to put staked SOL to work securing additional services. The idea resonated quickly, especially in a market hungry for capital efficiency.
But behind the scenes, the team was already thinking bigger. Restaking was only the starting point. Over time, Solayer began layering in financial products, payments tooling, and quality-of-service concepts tied directly to stake. Each addition pointed in the same direction: building infrastructure, not just yield strategies.
InfiniSVM is the clearest expression of that shift.
At a high level, InfiniSVM is Solayer’s take on pushing the Solana Virtual Machine beyond what typical software-only blockchain setups can handle. Instead of relying entirely on standard execution environments, Solayer leans heavily into hardware acceleration and high-speed networking.
The goal is not just higher throughput, although the numbers being discussed are eye-catching. The real focus is latency. Solayer wants transactions to feel immediate, finality to be near-instant, and on-chain systems to behave more like traditional financial infrastructure.
That matters if you believe the next wave of crypto adoption comes from things like real-time trading, payments, and institutional workflows. These are areas where delays are costly and reliability is non-negotiable.
Just as important, InfiniSVM stays fully compatible with the Solana Virtual Machine. Developers building for Solana do not need to rethink their stack to deploy on Solayer, which lowers friction and keeps Solayer tightly connected to Solana’s liquidity and tooling.
The InfiniSVM mainnet alpha is live, giving developers a chance to test what this architecture can actually do in production. While alpha networks are, by definition, still evolving, Solayer is already supporting live applications and cross-network connectivity designed to move assets quickly across SVM environments.
The team has been careful not to oversell this stage. The alpha is a foundation, not a finish line. Performance tuning, validator expansion, and decentralization will all come over time. Still, getting a live network into the hands of builders is an important milestone, and one many projects never quite reach.
Alongside the mainnet launch, Solayer introduced a $35 million ecosystem fund aimed squarely at builders. The fund is designed to support teams working across DeFi, payments, real-world assets, and emerging financial applications that need speed and scale.
What stands out is the hands-on approach. Solayer is pairing capital with engineering support and accelerator-style programs, signaling that it wants serious builders who plan to push the limits of the network, not just deploy quick forks.
The timing feels intentional. With the network live, the next challenge is usage. The fund is meant to shorten the gap between infrastructure and real economic activity.
Solayer is entering a space that is getting more competitive by the month. Several teams are exploring new ways to extend the Solana Virtual Machine through app chains, execution layers, and modular designs.
Solayer’s angle is clear. It is betting on extreme performance and financial use cases first. That focus sets it apart and plays to Solana’s broader reputation for speed, while pushing the ceiling higher than most existing networks.
If real-time on-chain finance becomes a meaningful category, Solayer looks well positioned to benefit.
There is still plenty of work ahead. Solayer will need to prove that its performance claims hold up under sustained load, that developers stay engaged, and that decentralization keeps pace with growth.
But with a live mainnet, meaningful funding behind the ecosystem, and a clear technical vision, Solayer is starting this next chapter from a position of strength.
In a market crowded with half-built infrastructure and big promises, Solayer is doing something refreshingly straightforward. It shipped a network, backed it with capital, and invited builders to see what happens next.