Crypto exchanges are opening a two-front war for the stock market

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12 Min Read


Binance, Kraken, Bybit, and Gemini are moving to add US stocks and ETFs to their crypto trading apps, making a direct play for the retail brokerage relationship that Wall Street has owned for a century.

Binance launched direct access to more than 7,000 US stocks and ETFs alongside bStocks, a tokenized product offering 1:1 economic exposure to selected US equities that settle in stablecoins, can be withdrawn to self-custody wallets, and trade 24/7 on Binance Spot.

Kraken’s xStocks reached 100 fully backed tokenized US stocks and ETFs, surpassed $25 billion in transaction volume since June 2025, and is targeting 500+ listings by the end of 2026.

On June 7, Bybit announced it would give retail investors access to tokenized IPOs, starting with SpaceX, with spot trading opening on June 12.

Gemini allows customers in eligible European countries to trade Dinari dShares, tokenized stocks backed 1:1 by corresponding US equities, with zero trading fees and 24/7 availability.

Each exchange is making the same offer to trade Nvidia, Tesla, or Apple using the same wallet, stablecoin balance, and always-on interface already used for Bitcoin and Solana.

That offer forces two simultaneous confrontations: rival crypto exchanges competing for the same users, and Wall Street brokers defending the equity trading relationship they have owned for a century.

Kraken expands xStocks to BNB Chain enabling global access to tokenized equities
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Exchanges racing each other

Binance’s first-week data for its direct stock product shows that users in emerging markets accounted for over 80% of trading volume. Around 39% of trades were under $100, and roughly 25% of stock users were under 25.

These are mobile-first traders who already live inside crypto apps and now have a direct route to US equities without ever opening a conventional brokerage account.

With Binance opening that route, every competing exchange faces the competitive logic: a user who can buy Apple, hold stablecoins, and trade Bitcoin in one app stays there. Kraken, Bybit, and Gemini are all responding by making equities native to crypto accounts.

The battle lines run across inventory depth, liquidity, stablecoin funding, trading hours, fees, wallet withdrawal, and IPO access.

Platform Stock/ETF access Trading model Hours Differentiator Strategic threat
Binance 7,000+ direct US stocks/ETFs; bStocks for selected equities Direct stock access plus tokenized 1:1 economic exposure 24/7 for bStocks; extended access for direct stocks Stablecoin settlement, self-custody withdrawal, large global user base Turns crypto app into brokerage hub
Kraken 100 xStocks; targeting 500+ by end-2026 Fully backed 1:1 tokenized equities/ETFs 24/5 $25B+ transaction volume since June 2025 Builds scale and liquidity in tokenized equities
Bybit Tokenized IPO access starting with SpaceX IPO-style tokenized access Spot trading from June 12 Private/pre-IPO access angle Repackages scarce institutional access for retail
Gemini Dinari dShares in eligible European countries 1:1-backed tokenized stocks 24/7 Zero trading fees, EU availability Shows the trend is CEX-wide, not Binance-only

Bybit’s SpaceX angle shows where that last category is heading, with access to pre-IPO or newly public companies, historically gatekept by institutional brokers and wealth managers, repackaged as a retail distribution product available globally.

Kraken also opened access to the SpaceX IPO for clients in more than 110 countries via xStocks.
Binance Research projects that crypto exchanges could channel nearly 300 million new users and approximately $2 trillion in incremental capital into global equities by 2031.

The prize is the default financial app for a generation of traders who grew up trading crypto on their phones.

Crypto apps vs. market structure

NYSE announced a tokenized securities platform in January, designed for 24/7 trading, fractional shares, immediate settlement, and stablecoin funding.

In March, the SEC approved Nasdaq’s proposal to allow certain Russell 1000 stocks and major index ETFs to trade and settle in tokenized form through the DTC.

Traditional market infrastructure is converging on the same product logic as crypto exchanges. The contest between them is over who controls the rails, the rights framework, the custody layer, and the retail distribution relationship.

The World Federation of Exchanges has warned regulators that third-party tokenized equities can fragment liquidity, weaken price discovery, and expose investors to custody and enforceability risks absent from conventional share ownership.

The SEC’s January 2026 staff statement distinguished issuer-sponsored tokenized securities and third-party products, noting that the latter may be custodial entitlements or synthetic instruments that provide exposure without equity, voting, information, or other rights from the referenced issuer.

Binance says bStocks are not stocks or shares and do not allow holders to own the listed company’s underlying shares directly.

Kraken says xStocks do not confer ownership, though account balances may adjust to reflect dividends.

Robinhood’s EU product page describes its stock tokens as derivative contracts priced by reference to the underlying security, granting no rights to the underlying security.

Each product delivers economic exposure inside a crypto account, with the holder’s legal position determined by the issuer’s structure, jurisdiction, and redemption mechanics.

 

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