In the past decade, the identity of cryptocurrency exchanges seemed clearâthey were places for users to buy and sell Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other coins. However, by 2025, this definition is quietly shifting. With the evolution of the market, the upgrading of user demands, and the accelerated integration of traditional finance with the on-chain world, cryptocurrency exchanges are undergoing a profound transformation: evolving from âcrypto hubâ to âstock asset gateway.â
One of the most representative changes is that exchanges are beginning to introduce traditional assets into the on-chain ecosystemâtokenization of stocks, on-chain bonds, and stablecoin interest rate markets are gradually being rolled out. Investors are no longer satisfied with âtrading coinsâ; instead, they hope to allocate stock assets within the same account and asset system (such as USDT).
The appeal of stocks goes without saying. Strong growth of tech giants, ample liquidity, and stable quality of listed companies make them the âultimate asset poolâ in the eyes of many emerging market users. However, for a large number of investors, participating in stocks still means various inconveniences: the complex procedures for opening cross-border accounts, trading hours misaligned with local time zones, and the difficulty of directly using crypto assets to participate.
On the other hand, on-chain investors are maturing rapidly. They have become quite adept at using stable assets such as USDT and ETH, and are accustomed to decentralized, permissionless asset management methods. They are unwilling to âgo around the worldâ to open accounts or exchange currencies, but instead hope to âinvest in stocks with one clickâ using a crypto wallet.
Thus, a new demand gap is taking shape: to invest in stocks directly on-chain, supporting fractional shares, leverage, and 24/7 trading.
Under this trend, exchanges are beginning to try to transform. However, not all platforms are qualified to act first. The scale of registered users has become the key threshold determining whether a platform can âseek growth from traditional assets.â
Taking Gate as an example, the platform announced in June 2025 that the number of registered stock users exceeded 30 million, covering more than 200 countries and regions. This scale not only means that there is already a sufficient user base to test new products but also indicates that it has established a stable trust network in emerging markets, especially in Southeast Asia, Eastern Europe, and Japan and South Korea.
What does the number of users mean? It means:
The platform can directly support large-scale transactions using USDT without introducing fiat currency.
Users do not need to relearn the complex traditional financial processes, but can smoothly transition within their existing trading habits.
The community comes with educational features, and once the new product runs through the pathway, it can be rapidly promoted through viral distribution.
This approach is clearly more efficient and closer to young users than âpure Web2 financial institutions launching on-chain services.â
Recently, the xStocks stock zone launched by Gate has attracted industry attention. In this zone, users can directly trade underlying stock tokens such as TSLAx, AAPLx, SPYx, etc. with USDT, and it supports features like contract trading, leverage, fractional shares, and 24/7 trading.
This means that users can not only âbuy Appleâ but also short Tesla, hedge against NASDAQ volatility, and even perform T+0 operations in the after-hours stock market. All of these operations are completed on a cryptocurrency platform.
This is not Gateâs first exploration of the intersection of crypto and traditional finance, but it is a landmark breakthrough. Because compared to the unresolved liquidity and compliance issues in DeFi protocols, or other exchangesâ short-term forays into tokenized stocks, the launch of xStocks is closer to a real, long-term operating trading product system.
Of course, Gate is not the only one trying similar directions. Binance, Bitget, OKX, and others are also exploring different paths, such as launching on-chain wealth management, supporting Web3 payments, and embedding AI analysis assistants. However, in the expansion of the boundaries of âasset productsâ, Gate belongs to one of the camps of âleading the wayâ this time.
Functionally, todayâs leading crypto platforms are increasingly resembling a âstock asset integratorâ:
In this race, whoever can provide more assets and serve a broader range of users will have the opportunity to gain the structural dividends of the next round of crypto finance.
The breakthrough of Gate with 30 million users may be an industry signal: a trading platform with product capabilities, a user base, and stock coverage is preparing to capture more financial market share that âoriginally does not belong to the crypto world.â
If the early exchanges were like âTaobao in the coin circle,â helping people buy and sell Digital Money; then the exchanges in 2025 are more like âWeChat in stock finance,â carrying more complex functions such as asset migration, payment settlement, leverage strategies, and on-chain management.
In this competition of platform capabilities and product depth, whoever completes the transformation into a âmulti-asset comprehensive platformâ first may be the one to reap the biggest rewards in the next cycle.
Gate is just one of the representatives that took action first, but what it reflects is the reshuffling of the entire industry track.
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In the past decade, the identity of cryptocurrency exchanges seemed clearâthey were places for users to buy and sell Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other coins. However, by 2025, this definition is quietly shifting. With the evolution of the market, the upgrading of user demands, and the accelerated integration of traditional finance with the on-chain world, cryptocurrency exchanges are undergoing a profound transformation: evolving from âcrypto hubâ to âstock asset gateway.â
One of the most representative changes is that exchanges are beginning to introduce traditional assets into the on-chain ecosystemâtokenization of stocks, on-chain bonds, and stablecoin interest rate markets are gradually being rolled out. Investors are no longer satisfied with âtrading coinsâ; instead, they hope to allocate stock assets within the same account and asset system (such as USDT).
The appeal of stocks goes without saying. Strong growth of tech giants, ample liquidity, and stable quality of listed companies make them the âultimate asset poolâ in the eyes of many emerging market users. However, for a large number of investors, participating in stocks still means various inconveniences: the complex procedures for opening cross-border accounts, trading hours misaligned with local time zones, and the difficulty of directly using crypto assets to participate.
On the other hand, on-chain investors are maturing rapidly. They have become quite adept at using stable assets such as USDT and ETH, and are accustomed to decentralized, permissionless asset management methods. They are unwilling to âgo around the worldâ to open accounts or exchange currencies, but instead hope to âinvest in stocks with one clickâ using a crypto wallet.
Thus, a new demand gap is taking shape: to invest in stocks directly on-chain, supporting fractional shares, leverage, and 24/7 trading.
Under this trend, exchanges are beginning to try to transform. However, not all platforms are qualified to act first. The scale of registered users has become the key threshold determining whether a platform can âseek growth from traditional assets.â
Taking Gate as an example, the platform announced in June 2025 that the number of registered stock users exceeded 30 million, covering more than 200 countries and regions. This scale not only means that there is already a sufficient user base to test new products but also indicates that it has established a stable trust network in emerging markets, especially in Southeast Asia, Eastern Europe, and Japan and South Korea.
What does the number of users mean? It means:
The platform can directly support large-scale transactions using USDT without introducing fiat currency.
Users do not need to relearn the complex traditional financial processes, but can smoothly transition within their existing trading habits.
The community comes with educational features, and once the new product runs through the pathway, it can be rapidly promoted through viral distribution.
This approach is clearly more efficient and closer to young users than âpure Web2 financial institutions launching on-chain services.â
Recently, the xStocks stock zone launched by Gate has attracted industry attention. In this zone, users can directly trade underlying stock tokens such as TSLAx, AAPLx, SPYx, etc. with USDT, and it supports features like contract trading, leverage, fractional shares, and 24/7 trading.
This means that users can not only âbuy Appleâ but also short Tesla, hedge against NASDAQ volatility, and even perform T+0 operations in the after-hours stock market. All of these operations are completed on a cryptocurrency platform.
This is not Gateâs first exploration of the intersection of crypto and traditional finance, but it is a landmark breakthrough. Because compared to the unresolved liquidity and compliance issues in DeFi protocols, or other exchangesâ short-term forays into tokenized stocks, the launch of xStocks is closer to a real, long-term operating trading product system.
Of course, Gate is not the only one trying similar directions. Binance, Bitget, OKX, and others are also exploring different paths, such as launching on-chain wealth management, supporting Web3 payments, and embedding AI analysis assistants. However, in the expansion of the boundaries of âasset productsâ, Gate belongs to one of the camps of âleading the wayâ this time.
Functionally, todayâs leading crypto platforms are increasingly resembling a âstock asset integratorâ:
In this race, whoever can provide more assets and serve a broader range of users will have the opportunity to gain the structural dividends of the next round of crypto finance.
The breakthrough of Gate with 30 million users may be an industry signal: a trading platform with product capabilities, a user base, and stock coverage is preparing to capture more financial market share that âoriginally does not belong to the crypto world.â
If the early exchanges were like âTaobao in the coin circle,â helping people buy and sell Digital Money; then the exchanges in 2025 are more like âWeChat in stock finance,â carrying more complex functions such as asset migration, payment settlement, leverage strategies, and on-chain management.
In this competition of platform capabilities and product depth, whoever completes the transformation into a âmulti-asset comprehensive platformâ first may be the one to reap the biggest rewards in the next cycle.
Gate is just one of the representatives that took action first, but what it reflects is the reshuffling of the entire industry track.