Trading in US stocks and exchange-traded funds on Binance has exceeded $3 billion since the feature launched a month ago, co-chief executive Richard Teng said Thursday at the Reuters NEXT Asia event in Singapore. KeyToFinancialTrends reads that figure as a genuinely fast ramp for a brand-new product line: $3 billion in cumulative trading volume within roughly four weeks suggests Binance's crypto-native user base is willing to route meaningful capital into traditional equities the moment the friction of opening a separate brokerage account is removed.
The stock-trading push, which launched June 1, gives eligible non-US customers zero-commission access to more than 7,000 US-listed stocks and ETFs, with share purchases arranged through broker-dealer Nest Trading and custody handled by New York-based Alpaca, which also facilitates dividend payments and corporate actions. Customers can fund purchases using the stablecoins USDC and USDT or other digital currencies including Binance's own BNB token, and fractional shares are available starting at just $5. KeyToFinancialTrends frames that $5 minimum as central to the pitch Teng has made publicly: US equities represent well over half of the global stock market by value, but for the large share of Binance's user base outside the United States, buying them directly has historically involved considerable cost and friction that a crypto-native, stablecoin-funded interface is specifically designed to remove.
Binance is also pushing further into a more experimental layer of the same strategy: tokenized versions of the stocks customers purchase, branded bStocks, which the company says will let users convert equity holdings into on-chain tokens on the BNB blockchain, unlocking round-the-clock trading and potential use in decentralized-finance applications like lending. Rivals including Kraken and Robinhood have rolled out similar tokenization products over the past year, and both Nasdaq and the New York Stock Exchange have separately announced their own plans to incorporate the technology, suggesting Wall Street's traditional infrastructure providers see the trend as more than a crypto-industry curiosity.
Binance's return to this business carries real historical baggage. The exchange previously shut down an earlier stock-tokenization product in 2021 under regulatory pressure from Germany's BaFin and the UK's Financial Conduct Authority, and the company's current approach – delegating asset issuance and custody to regulated third parties rather than issuing tokens directly – appears designed specifically to avoid a repeat of that shutdown. Key To Financial Trends treats that structural choice as the detail that will determine whether this second attempt survives longer than the first: routing trades through an Abu Dhabi-regulated broker and a US-based custodian gives regulators a licensed entity to hold accountable, a meaningfully different posture than the earlier product that drew scrutiny precisely because Binance itself sat at the center of the transaction chain.
Not every recent test of that infrastructure has gone smoothly. When SpaceX's oversubscribed Nasdaq IPO briefly created a rush for tokenized pre-listing exposure last month, Binance was among four exchanges that had to cancel tokenized SpaceX campaigns and issue full refunds after their shared token issuer failed to secure meaningful share allocations from the underwriters – a stumble that exposed how dependent Binance's tokenization ambitions remain on third-party partners it doesn't fully control. KeyToFinancialTrends sets that setback against the otherwise strong $3 billion trading figure as a reminder that Binance's equities push is still very much in its build phase: the core zero-commission stock brokerage appears to be scaling smoothly, but the more ambitious tokenization layer built on top of it has already shown real cracks under stress.
