Bitget, recognised as the world’s largest Universal Exchange (UEX), has revealed that cumulative trading volume for its US stock futures has surpassed $200 million. The figure highlights the accelerating adoption of Bitget’s recently launched stock-linked derivatives. Leading the way among traded assets were Tesla (TSLA) with $71.5 million, NVIDIA (NVDA) with $25.05 million, and Circle (CRCL) with $17.68 million.
The achievement follows Bitget’s rollout of USDT-margined perpetual futures on 25 leading US stocks—marking the first time equity-based exposure has been introduced within its crypto trading ecosystem. These products provide leverage of up to 25x, competitive fees capped at 0.06%, and access to sectors such as technology, finance, semiconductors, aviation, consumer goods, and hospitality. Traders can engage with tokenised representations of global brands including Apple, Tesla, Amazon, and NVIDIA, all available through Bitget’s comprehensive futures offering.
To commemorate the milestone, Bitget has launched The U.S. Stock Token Carnival, which runs from 16 October, 21:31 to 8 November, 03:58 (UTC+8). Participants who trade $100 or more in US stock tokens will earn 100 USDT, as part of a $5 million rewards pool comprising 50,000 prizes.
“We’re seeing incredible momentum in Stock Futures, and it proves that traders want a simpler, more connected market,” said Gracy Chen, CEO of Bitget. “The line between traditional and digital assets is disappearing, and I’m excited for Bitget to be leading the charge.”
The expansion of Stock Futures represents a key step in Bitget’s UEX strategy to merge traditional financial instruments with digital assets. As one of the world’s foremost Universal Exchanges, Bitget integrates spot, futures, and on-chain markets into a single platform. The introduction of tokenised equity futures enhances this model, giving users round-the-clock access to real-world asset trading through crypto-native derivatives backed by transparent on-chain settlement and institutional-grade execution.
