Binance's direct stock-trading platform drew more than 80% of its first-week volume from emerging markets, according to data the company published this morning. The figures position the June 1 launch as a distribution play for underserved retail users, with a 2% share of TradFi-referenced perpetuals volume as the opening benchmark.
Assets under management in stocks crossed $400 million within the first seven days, Binance said in a press release published Wednesday. Emerging-market users generated approximately 84% of total trading volume, per Binance Research's data thread published Tuesday on X.
Who Is Trading
One in four users was under 25. Nearly 40% of trades were placed for less than $100, and the minimum ticket is $5, against minimum deposits of $500 to $10,000 on many conventional brokerages. Around 10% of product-page visitors registered; roughly 64% of those sign-ups placed at least one trade. Seventy percent of users held positions rather than closing on the same day.
Shunyet Jan, Binance's Head of Spot and Derivatives Business, said in the press release that the data shows user demand materializes in emerging markets, younger demographics, and trade sizes traditional platforms were not built to serve.
Where the Money Went
Information Technology captured 57% of sector allocation in week one. Semiconductors and hardware alone took roughly 44% of total inflows, a concentration Binance Research tied to user conviction around AI infrastructure. Funds and ETPs followed at 20%. Users traded across more than 1,100 assets; 124 of those each exceeded $100,000 in traded value.
Context
The week-one figures come nine days after Binance launched direct US equities trading for eligible non-US users, opening access to more than 7,000 US-listed stocks and ETFs through its ADGM-regulated broker Nest Trading Limited, with custody handled by Alpaca. That launch, covered by Converge on June 1, also previewed bStocks, a forthcoming tokenized-securities product issued through an ADGM-registered special purpose vehicle and pending regulatory approval.
Binance Research noted the crypto spot-to-perps ratio has historically run around 15%, framing that as the longer-term convergence target if direct equities trading scales. Whether the emerging-market skew and holding behavior persist beyond the launch window will determine whether the distribution thesis holds.
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