In a new listing round, Binance has launched spot trading of tokenized stocks of Microsoft (MSFTB), Meta (METAB), Palantir (PLTRB), Lumentum (LITEB), and Invesco QQQ Trust Fund (QQQB), paired with USDT.
The listings of IT giants and other companies reflect an influx of liquidity into the real assets (RWA) sector. According to Binance Research, the platform already controls 55.7% of the global trading volume of RWA derivatives, and the volume of tokenized stocks on crypto exchanges during periods of peak volatility exceeds the volume of traditional equity platforms by a factor of 4 to 21.
Why Binance is doubling down on tech stocks
This growth is also confirmed by the latest CoinGecko statistics, which showed that in May 2026, trading volume in crypto RWA derivatives reached $347.17 billion, led by Binance, MEXC, and Hyperliquid, compared to $230 million in January 2025. At the same time, traders prefer speculative products, with TradFi perpetual trading volume in 2026 being more than eight times that of standard RWA spot. transaction.

The tokenized equity segment itself broke records for the entirety of last year in just five months of 2026, increasing from $831 million to $34 billion in May. Investor attention was focused on the IT sector, with NVDA and TSLA leading the secondary market, while Micron Technology (MU)’s sales soared to $13.16 billion.
Microsoft’s listing fits perfectly into this trend, expanding the range of in-demand technology brands.
However, initiating trades through bStocks has some pitfalls for traders. BTech Holdings Limited’s products are classified only as depositary receipts. Although these are linked to exchange prices, they do not legally give investors voting rights, real dividend rights, or direct ownership of the company’s stock.
Buyers of bStocks fully assume the issuer’s credit and operational risks, and if a Binance-related entity runs into trouble, investors will not be able to claim real Microsoft or Meta stocks on Wall Street.

