Crypto exchanges are becoming the new distribution channel for Wall Street assets

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Crypto exchanges are increasingly becoming distribution platforms for Wall Street exposure as trading in tokenized stocks and real-world asset derivatives accelerates across crypto markets.

Tokenized assets became the most-listed category across major centralized exchanges in the first half of 2026, accounting for nearly one in every five new listings, CryptoRank data shows. The category represented less than 7% of listings in 2025.

The expansion was driven largely by tokenized equities issued through platforms including xStocks, bStocks and Ondo’s tokenized markets.

Their rise marks a sharp change in exchange strategy after years in which memecoins, gaming tokens and other crypto-native assets dominated listing pipelines.

The shift comes as conventional retail participation in US stocks cools. American retail investors purchased a net $13 billion in equities over the past month, the lowest total since the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, according to data from financial analytics firm VandaTrack.

Net purchases fell by $18 billion, or 58%, from early 2026 levels. Buying of individual stocks declined 71% to $3.2 billion.

The US figures cover a different market and investor group from the global tokenized-asset data. Crypto exchanges are nevertheless expanding stock-linked products for users seeking continuous trading, fractional access and exposure outside conventional brokerage infrastructure.

Tokenized stock trading is already scaling

The rapid growth in derivatives activity gives exchanges a clearer reason to expand their Wall Street-linked product offerings.

Trading volume in real-world asset perpetual futures on centralized crypto exchanges rose 57% in June to a record $311 billion, according to CoinDesk exchange data. Binance accounted for $245 billion, or 78.6% of the market.

RWA Perpetuals on Centralized Exchanges
RWA Perpetuals on Centralized Exchanges (Source: CoinDesk Data)

The category had generated negligible activity in late 2025 before expanding sharply through the first half of 2026.

The SpaceX initial public offering helped accelerate demand for crypto-based exposure to traditional financial instruments, particularly among traders seeking access outside the limits of conventional brokerage and equity-market infrastructure.

Perpetual futures allow users to speculate on an asset’s price without owning the underlying security and without an expiry date. They have become one of the most active products on crypto exchanges, where leverage and 24-hour trading can amplify both volume and volatility.

Meanwhile, the growth extends beyond derivatives.

Data from RWA.xyz shows that the tokenized stock market has grown by more than 470% in the past year to around $1.87 billion. Monthly transfer volume for these assets has also climbed to $8.4 billion, indicating that tokenized equities are attracting activity beyond the exchange-listing pipeline.

Tokenized Stock Market Cap
Tokenized Stock Market Cap (Source: RWA.xyz)

Kraken said in February that xStocks had surpassed $25 billion in total transaction volume. The figure included centralized and decentralized exchange transactions, as well as minting and redemptions, with more than $3.5 billion in on-chain activity.

Those figures show that the increase in listings is occurring alongside measurable activity in both tokenized equities and derivatives linked to traditional assets.

Exchanges are listing fewer tokens as Wall Street assets replace crypto’s old favorites

The rise of tokenized assets has coincided with a broader slowdown in exchange listings and a retreat from the speculative sectors that defined the previous crypto cycle.

Cryptorank stated that major centralized exchanges listed 351 tokens in the second quarter of 2026, the lowest quarterly total since the third quarter of 2023. New listings declined for a second consecutive quarter, making it only the second period since the start of 2024 in which delistings outpaced additions.

The slowdown follows a record year in 2025, when listing activity peaked alongside Bitcoin’s all-time high. Rather than replacing the lost volume with another wave of crypto-native projects, exchanges have shifted toward tokenized versions of traditional financial assets.

Tokenized assets became the largest listing category in the first half of 2026, having accounted for less than 7% of new listings in 2025. Exchanges added 42 tokenized assets in the second quarter alone, trailing only blockchain infrastructure and decentralized finance.

At the same time, the categories that dominated the previous bull market continued to lose momentum.

Memecoin listings have declined for six consecutive quarters. Exchanges added 196 memecoins in the fourth quarter of 2024, but that figure fell to 41 in the second quarter of 2026, a 79% decline and the lowest quarterly total since the third quarter of 2023.

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