Regulatory pressure on traditional cross-border brokers has brought renewed attention to how users access U.S. equities. But it should be understood as a catalyst, not the root cause of crypto exchanges entering U.S. stock products. The deeper shift is that crypto-native users are already following markets beyond crypto: AI stocks, semiconductor cycles, EV companies, IPO narratives, macro rates, gold, and global equity indices.
Crypto exchanges are responding to that broader behavior change. They are not simply trying to replace traditional brokers. They are building more ways for existing crypto users to access, trade, or gain exposure to the risk assets they already watch.
Crypto exchanges are no longer competing only on spot pairs, futures depth, or listing speed. They are increasingly moving toward broader cross-asset access.
The reason is simple: users no longer follow only one market.
Bitcoin and Ethereum still matter, but the same users may also watch Nvidia earnings, Tesla delivery data, AI infrastructure stocks, semiconductor cycles, IPO speculation, gold, oil, interest rates, and global equity indices. The modern market participant is becoming more opportunity-driven than asset-class-driven.
That creates a product gap.
Crypto opportunities often sit inside one platform. U.S. equity opportunities often sit somewhere else. Funding, onboarding, market access, and product understanding remain fragmented. The exact gap: users may follow U.S. equity opportunities, but access can remain difficult because of separate brokerage accounts, bank transfers, currency conversion steps, and unfamiliar trading flows.
The demand shift does not necessarily mean crypto users are becoming conservative. In many cases, risk appetite remains, but the preferred asset has changed. When crypto markets enter a lower-beta phase, high-attention equity themes such as AI, semiconductors, EVs, and mega-cap technology stocks can become alternative risk assets for users who still want liquidity, narratives, and price movement.
This is why more crypto exchanges are entering U.S. stock access. But the important point is this: “U.S. stocks on a crypto exchange” can mean very different things.
A platform saying it offers U.S. stocks does not tell users enough.
This is why stock products on crypto exchanges should be compared by product type, not only by exchange name. A single exchange may offer real stock access, tokenized stocks, CFDs, and equity perpetuals at the same time. These products serve different behaviors: ownership-oriented access, crypto-native transferability, and leveraged price trading.
These products are not interchangeable. Real stock access serves ownership-oriented demand, tokenized stocks serve crypto-native transferability, and CFDs or equity perpetuals serve leveraged price trading. Many exchanges are now building all three layers at once.
Product model: Real stock access through brokerage partners
What it means: Users access real U.S. stock trading through brokerage and market infrastructure partners.
What users should check: Eligibility, KYC, dividend participation where applicable, ownership benefits, trading hours, regional availability.
Product model: Tokenized stocks
What it means: Users access a tokenized instrument linked to an underlying stock or ETF.
What users should check: Issuer, backing structure, redemption terms, dividend treatment, shareholder rights, liquidity.
Product model: Stock CFDs / equity perpetuals
What it means: Users trade price movements through derivatives without holding the underlying shares.
What users should check: Leverage, funding rates, liquidation risk, mark price, trading hours, no direct share ownership.
This is the core comparison. The real question is not whether an exchange displays Apple, Tesla, Nvidia, or other U.S. stock names. The real question is what product structure sits behind those names.
MEXC has introduced RealStocks, a U.S. stock access product that is supported through brokerage and market infrastructure partnerships, allowing eligible users to access real U.S. stock trading through a more crypto-native platform flow.
Updated on June 1st 2026
Exchange: MEXC
Stock access model: Partnered stocks / ETFs / dividends
Tokenized stocks: Yes
CFDs / equity perps: Perpetuals
Exchange: Binance
Stock access model: Partnered stocks / ETFs / dividends
Tokenized stocks: Yes
CFDs / equity perps: Perpetuals
Exchange: Gate
Stock access model: Partnered stocks / ETFs / dividends
Tokenized stocks: Yes
CFDs / equity perps: Perpetuals
Exchange: Bitget
Stock access model: /
Tokenized stocks: Yes
CFDs / equity perps: CFD / perpetuals
Exchange: Bybit
Stock access model: /
Tokenized stocks: Yes
CFDs / equity perps: Perpetuals
Exchange: Kraken
Stock access model: Yes — stocks / ETFs / dividends
Tokenized stocks: Yes
CFDs / equity perps: Perpetuals
The U.S. stock race among crypto exchanges is not simply about who lists more U.S. tickers.
After tighter scrutiny on traditional cross-border brokerage channels, crypto exchanges are becoming a new venue for U.S. stock-related access. But not all products are the same. Some are built around real stock access through brokerage and market infrastructure partners. Others provide tokenized stock exposure, CFDs, or equity perpetuals. In some cases, the same exchange may offer several product types across different regions or interfaces.
RealStocks product can be mentioned as one example of this broader shift, using the approved language around eligible users, real U.S. stock trading access, dividend participation where applicable, USDT-based access, and brokerage or market infrastructure partnerships.
For users, the most important comparison is no longer just the exchange logo or ticker list. It is the product structure behind each ticker: real stock access, tokenized exposure, or derivative-based price tracking.
Real stock access usually refers to products that connect eligible users to real U.S. stock trading through brokerage or market infrastructure partners. Tokenized stocks provide token-based exposure linked to underlying equities or ETFs. Stock CFDs and equity perpetuals are derivatives that track price movements without giving users ownership of the underlying shares.
Not necessarily. “0 fees” refers only to the platform service charge. Users may still be subject to SEC transaction fees, FINRA trading activity fees, exchange and market center fees, regulatory fees, clearing fees, or other applicable fees.
No. Availability depends on jurisdiction, product type, platform rules, and local laws. Users should always check whether a specific product is available in their region before using it.

