Binance has expanded its tokenized equity product suite with ten new bStock trading pairs against USDT. The additions include CBRSB/USDT, COINB/USDT, DRAMB/USDT, GLWB/USDT, GOOGLB/USDT, NBISB/USDT, QCOMB/USDT, SOXLB/USDT, SPYB/USDT and WDCB/USDT.
The new pairs trade on a continuous schedule and settle in USDT, with minimum trade sizes reported at $5. The rollout extends Binance’s push to bridge traditional equity exposure with crypto-native liquidity and exchange infrastructure.
Binance Expands Tokenized Equity Access
The bStock expansion gives users more equity-linked instruments inside Binance’s spot trading environment. Instead of accessing these tickers through a conventional brokerage account, traders can interact with tokenized versions through a centralized crypto venue.
Binance also offers a zero-fee instant exchange mechanism that allows users to convert tokenized positions into a 1:1 representation of the underlying stock. The exchange is waiving maker commissions through August 2026 to support initial adoption.
The structure is designed to lower friction for traders seeking traditional market exposure without relying on standard exchange hours or separate brokerage rails. That convenience is central to Binance’s broader strategy of bringing real-world asset products into its existing trading interface.
Centralized Settlement Creates Operational Dependencies
Continuous 24/7 access expands trading flexibility beyond traditional market windows, but it also concentrates settlement, pricing and custody workflows within Binance’s platform. Users do not hold direct custodial claims to the underlying shares.
Exposure is managed through Binance’s internal tokenization framework and liquidity systems. The 1:1 conversion feature creates a bridge to the traditional asset, but execution still depends on the exchange’s compliance posture, jurisdictional permissions and risk controls.
The new listings build on earlier bStock integrations involving major technology stocks and ETF-linked products. Binance has not detailed full jurisdictional coverage or the regulatory framework governing after-hours price discovery for these specific tickers.
Several operational questions remain tied to Binance’s internal protocols, including how the products handle traditional market halts, dividends and corporate actions. Those mechanics matter because equity-linked instruments must account for events that originate outside crypto market hours.
The expansion shows Binance continuing to integrate traditional equity exposure into its crypto trading stack. The next indicators will be liquidity depth, conversion reliability, user uptake and regulatory clarity as bStocks scale across more asset classes.
