Binance has disclosed a minority stake in Alpaca as it expands access to U.S. stocks and ETFs for eligible users outside the United States. The latest Binance news shows how the exchange is moving beyond crypto trading and deeper into traditional markets.
The service offers more than 7,000 U.S.-listed stocks and ETFs, with fractional purchases starting from $5. Users can also trade during extended weekday hours, giving the product a global retail focus.
The stock trading service is offered through Nest Trading Limited, a Binance-linked entity regulated by the Abu Dhabi Global Market. Nest Trading acts as the introducing broker for securities trading.
Alpaca Securities handles execution, clearing, settlement, and custody. Binance says it does not directly handle or custody the securities traded through the service.
Binance News | Source: Wu Blockchain (X)
That structure gives Binance a route into U.S. equities without holding user shares itself. It also gives Alpaca access to one of the world’s largest crypto user bases.
Users can fund stock purchases with stablecoins and selected crypto balances. USDC is described as the main stablecoin option, while Binance also supports BNB, USDT, USD1, and $U for eligible users.
The service does not immediately launch with tokenized stocks. Binance said its planned bStocks product will launch later and may support on-chain access to equities.
The Binance news is also important because the Alpaca deal includes revenue-sharing terms. Alpaca receives payment for order flow when customer orders are routed for execution.
Under the disclosed terms, Binance receives 50% of Alpaca’s order-flow revenue. That gives Binance a direct commercial interest in trading activity through the service. Payment for order flow is widely used in retail brokerage. Still, it often raises questions about execution quality and transparency.
Binance says the conflict is managed through partner selection standards and ongoing execution reviews. Alpaca’s regulatory duties as a broker-dealer are also part of that framework.
The agreement also gives Binance 65% of the remaining profit from user stock lending after interest is paid to users. This adds another revenue line tied to securities activity.
Stock lending can generate income when users allow fully paid shares to be borrowed. However, users need to understand the terms before joining any lending program.
Alpaca has become a major infrastructure provider for tokenized stocks and related brokerage services. Prior data cited in the terms says Alpaca controls about 94% of tokenized U.S. stock and ETF custody.
That market position matters as crypto platforms race to add stocks, funds, and on-chain securities. Tokenized stocks are becoming a key bridge between blockchain apps and traditional markets.
Binance’s bStocks plan could deepen that connection. The company says eligible users may later convert supported equity holdings into on-chain assets.
Those assets may support lending and liquidity use cases, depending on launch rules. This could make tokenized stocks more useful inside crypto-native platforms.
The wider market is also watching crypto ETFs. As more exchanges add stocks and ETF products, the line between crypto apps and brokerage platforms continues to blur.
Crypto ETFs give users regulated exposure to digital asset themes. Tokenized stocks, meanwhile, aim to bring traditional equities into blockchain-based systems.
For Binance, the Alpaca partnership supports a multi-asset strategy. It can offer crypto, U.S. stocks, ETFs, and futures on-chain securities through connected infrastructure.
The post Binance News: Alpaca Investment Emerges as Stock Trading Goes Global appeared first on The Coin Republic.


