Binance Launches bStocks Tokenized Securities

Binance has launched bStocks, a tokenized securities product that lets eligible users trade certificates backed 1:1 by U.S. shares held at a regulated custodian. The product, issued by BTech Holdings Limited, is available only in permitted jurisdictions and explicitly excludes the United States.

How bStocks Works and What Binance Announced

On June 11, 2026, Binance announced that eligible users can trade and convert bStocks, with each token backed by a corresponding U.S. share held in regulated custody. The product is issued by BTech Holdings Limited, a Binance group affiliate.

bStocks are classified as certificates representing certain financial instruments under Abu Dhabi Global Market rules. They do not confer direct ownership of the underlying shares, a distinction that separates them from traditional equity holdings.

The initial live batch covers five equities: Nvidia, Tesla, Circle Internet Group, Micron Technology, and Sandisk, according to The Defiant. Users can convert underlying stock holdings into corresponding tokens at a 1:1 ratio without conversion fees.

Initial live batch
5 equities
The Defiant reported that the first live bStocks batch covered five equities: Nvidia, Tesla, Circle, Micron, and Sandisk.

Eligible users can access bStocks starting from as little as $5, lowering the barrier to entry compared to purchasing full shares of high-priced equities like Nvidia or Tesla.

Minimum entry size
$5
Binance said eligible users can access bStocks starting from as little as $5.

ADGM's Official List of Securities shows BTech Holdings Limited listings for Tesla, Circle Internet Group, Nvidia, Micron Technology, SanDisk, and SpaceX bStocks on Nest Exchange Limited, each categorized as certificates over shares. However, the exact exchange launch timing of a SpaceX-related bStocks product remains unclear across reporting, so it is not confirmed as live at launch.

Who Can Access bStocks

Binance stated that bStocks are offered only to eligible users in permitted jurisdictions. The product is not offered, sold, or made available in the United States or to U.S. persons.

The eligibility restriction makes this a controlled rollout rather than a mass-market product. Binance has not publicly detailed which specific countries or investor classes qualify, but the product operates under an approved prospectus in ADGM, suggesting the regulatory framework shapes access.

This selective approach echoes broader industry caution around tokenized securities. The U.S. SEC's January 28, 2026 staff statement on tokenized securities noted that third-party tokenized instruments may or may not confer the rights of the underlying security, identifying a custodial model where the underlying asset is held in custody, similar to the bStocks structure.

What bStocks Signals for Binance's Strategy

The launch positions Binance beyond standard crypto trading into tokenized traditional finance. The use of a branded product name suggests a deliberate new product line, not a one-off experiment. Binance previewed a broader stock-trading service on June 1, 2026, covering more than 7,000 U.S.-listed stocks and ETFs, with bStocks serving as the onchain tokenized layer of that offering.

The regulatory structure matters. bStocks are admitted to ADGM's FSRA Official List via BTech Holdings Limited and Nest Exchange, giving them a formal regulatory footprint that many tokenized equity products lack. Most competitor coverage of the launch has not connected Binance's certificate structure to the SEC's January 2026 tokenized-securities taxonomy, which explicitly describes the custodial model bStocks uses.

Industry policy voices have weighed in on the broader regulatory question. Researchers at a16z crypto, including Scott Walker, Miles Jennings, Kate Dellolio, Aiden Slavin, and David Sverdlov, wrote that "any regulatory shift should be calibrated to preserve those foundations while allowing innovation to proceed responsibly."

The move comes as crypto exchanges increasingly look to bridge traditional equities and blockchain infrastructure. Spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen sustained inflows in recent weeks, reflecting growing institutional appetite for regulated crypto-adjacent products. Meanwhile, regulatory clarity remains a work in progress, with the CLARITY Act still under discussion in U.S. legislative circles.

The tokenized securities space also carries risks. DeFi liquidity risks flagged by industry observers underscore the importance of robust custody and settlement mechanisms, precisely the kind of infrastructure Binance says underpins bStocks through its regulated custodian model.

BNB, the native token of BNB Chain, traded at $609.43 at press time, up 1.12% over the previous 24 hours, with a market cap of approximately $82.1 billion. The Fear and Greed Index sat at 13, indicating extreme fear in the broader crypto market despite the product expansion.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.