Binance is rolling out US stock trading for users outside the United States, giving eligible customers access to more than 7,000 US-listed stocks and ETFs with zero commissions and fractional purchases starting at $5.
The launch, reported by Fortune on June 1, 2026, positions the crypto exchange as a multi-asset platform. Binance co-CEO Richard Teng outlined the initiative in an interview with the outlet, framing it as part of the company’s broader super-app strategy.
How the Stock Trading Product Works
Nest Trading Limited, an Abu Dhabi Global Market-registered entity with FSP number 260000, will arrange the trades. The firm was originally approved as BCI Limited under ADGM’s broker-dealer framework in December 2025, with permissions covering deal arrangement, asset management, and custody coordination.
Alpaca, a US-based financial infrastructure provider, will handle custody, dividend processing, and corporate actions on the backend. The split structure lets Binance offer stock access through its app while routing execution and settlement through regulated intermediaries.
ADGM’s public register notes that Nest Trading Limited is not permitted to hold or control client money or client investments directly. This constraint means the custody and clearing layers handled by Alpaca are structurally essential, not optional.
Why Non-US Expansion Matters for Binance
By targeting users outside the United States, Binance sidesteps the regulatory complexity it faces in the US market while tapping demand for American equities among international investors. The zero-commission, fractional-share model mirrors what Robinhood and other US brokerages popularized domestically.
The move diversifies Binance beyond crypto at a time when exchanges face pressure to grow revenue streams. As recent sanctions actions against crypto networks and US seizures of crypto assets have shown, regulatory scrutiny on pure-play crypto businesses continues to intensify globally.
Looking ahead, Binance has signaled plans for a tokenized securities product called bStocks, which would allow users to convert certain equities into digital tokens on BNB Chain. According to the company’s stated roadmap, this feature could arrive in the coming weeks, though it remains pending regulatory approval.
Market Reaction Has Been Muted
Despite the announcement, BNB traded at $695.27 with a 3.71% decline over 24 hours during the same period. The broader crypto market was also in retreat, with the Crypto Fear and Greed Index sitting at 29, firmly in “Fear” territory.
The muted reaction suggests traders are waiting for execution details rather than pricing in the announcement at face value. Key unknowns include which specific countries will have access at launch, how settlement times will compare to traditional brokerages, and whether the broader trend of blockchain platforms expanding into traditional finance will accelerate in response.
Binance has not disclosed a specific launch date for the stock trading rollout or confirmed the full list of eligible jurisdictions beyond stating the service targets non-US users.
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.








