Binance has added Microsoft and Alibaba to its traditional finance (TradFi) trading roster, as the exchange reported a 188% surge in TradFi trading volume.
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The listings mark another step in the crypto exchange's push to bridge digital asset infrastructure with conventional equity markets, according to a report from U.Today.
Crypto Rails for Traditional Assets
The addition of two of the world's largest technology companies — Microsoft, valued at over $3 trillion, and Alibaba — signals Binance's growing ambition to become a one-stop platform for both crypto-native and traditional asset trading.
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The rollout is part of Binance Futures, with trading set to begin on April 20 and offering up to 10x leverage through perpetual contracts. The exchange has also included Broadcom in the expansion, further widening its exposure to high-profile global equities.
The 188% increase in TradFi trading volume on Binance underscores growing user demand for traditional financial products on crypto platforms. According to Binance Research, daily trading volume in TradFi-linked derivatives on crypto exchanges reached approximately $8.6 billion in Q1 2026, with Binance accounting for roughly 41% of the segment.
The Blurring Line Between TradFi and Crypto
Binance's TradFi expansion fits into a broader industry trend. Several major crypto platforms have been working to integrate traditional financial instruments — including tokenized equities, bonds, and money market funds — into their offerings. The logic is straightforward: if users already trust a platform with their crypto portfolios, offering stocks and other conventional assets creates a stickier ecosystem.
This shift is also driven by structural advantages. Unlike traditional exchanges, crypto markets operate 24/7, allowing them to absorb liquidity even when traditional markets are closed. Binance data suggests that trading activity in TradFi perpetuals continues over weekends, with some signals acting as early indicators for Monday market openings.
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In commodities, this dynamic is already visible. Binance CEO Richard Teng noted that gold trading volumes on the platform have, at peak periods, exceeded those of national exchanges in regions such as Dubai, India, and Japan by two to four times.
Data further suggests that TradFi perpetuals may function as predictive tools, with weekend trading activity reportedly forecasting Monday opening gaps in commodity-related equities with up to 89% accuracy.
Competing Models: Derivatives vs Tokenization
As TradFi moves onchain, two distinct strategies are emerging.
Binance is focusing on derivatives-based exposure, offering leveraged access and capital efficiency that appeals to active traders and hedge funds.
Meanwhile, Coinbase has taken a different route, leaning into tokenization — offering thousands of tokenized equities designed for long-term investors seeking direct onchain exposure rather than leveraged trading.
This divergence highlights a broader question shaping the market: whether users prefer synthetic exposure via derivatives or ownership-style exposure via tokenized assets.
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What This Means for Institutional Adoption
The listing of blue-chip equities like Microsoft and Alibaba on a crypto exchange carries symbolic weight. It suggests that the infrastructure originally built for trading Bitcoin and altcoins is now mature enough — at least in Binance's view — to handle products that institutional and retail investors associate with traditional brokerage accounts.
Whether this translates into sustained institutional flows remains to be seen. Regulatory scrutiny of Binance continues in multiple jurisdictions, and institutional allocators typically require regulatory clarity before committing capital through any platform.
blockster.com