Crypto exchanges that remain pure trading venues may not survive the next cycle. In a statement released Thursday, Bybit CEO Ben Zhou argued that the industry must shift toward becoming full financial infrastructure providers, naming tokenization, stablecoins, and artificial intelligence as the key pillars. It’s a bet on a future where an exchange touches every part of an asset’s life, not just the moment it changes hands.
The underlying message from Zhou is not just a Bybit strategy update. It reflects a broader reshuffling of how exchanges see themselves. For years, the biggest platforms competed on speed, fees, and the depth of their order books. That game is now table stakes. The next layer of competition is whether an exchange can custody tokenized real-world assets, process stablecoin settlements for institutions, and embed AI agents that manage portfolios or automate compliance.
Bybit’s pivot, while still in early stages, mirrors moves by rivals like Coinbase, which launched its own layer-2 network, and Binance, which has deepened its stablecoin integrations. The difference is that Zhou is publicly framing this as an existential shift, not just a product expansion. TradFi giants are already encroaching on crypto’s turf, and exchanges that don’t build infrastructure risk becoming thin interfaces for custody and execution.
Tokenization of real-world assets has moved from pilot projects to a $20 billion on-chain market, as highlighted in a recent market roundup. Exchanges are now positioning to be the primary gateways for these instruments. Zhou’s comments suggest Bybit wants to be more than a venue where tokenized Treasuries are traded—it wants to issue, custody, and settle them.
This is not a trivial undertaking. Moving into tokenization means navigating securities laws across multiple jurisdictions, building or buying trust infrastructure, and convincing issuers that a crypto-native exchange can handle assets with the same rigor as a traditional custodian. Yet the prize is substantial: if institutions eventually migrate trillions in bonds, funds, and private credit onto blockchain rails, the exchanges that control the settlement layer capture a permanent fee stream.
Artificial intelligence is the third piece of Zhou’s blueprint. AI-driven tools are already creeping into exchange offerings, from trading bots to fraud detection. But the vision outlined Thursday goes further. Exchanges could host AI agents that rebalance institutional portfolios, run decentralized compute marketplaces, or provide personalized financial analytics. Partnerships like the one between UXLINK and Origins Network show how quickly AI infrastructure can weave into Web3, and demand for AI data storage is giving projects like Filecoin new relevance as compute workloads grow.
Stablecoins operate as the connective tissue. Bybit already handles enormous stablecoin volumes for settlement and collateral. Building out stablecoin-native ramps—including direct integration with payment systems and corporate treasuries—transforms an exchange into a quasi-banking layer. That blurring of lines is exactly the point. Zhou is betting that users and institutions will gravitate toward platforms where they can issue, borrow, spend, and earn on assets without ever touching a traditional bank.
How quickly any of this becomes reality hinges on regulation. The infrastructure model puts exchanges directly in competition with banks and clearinghouses, and incumbents are pushing back. A recent fight over a major US crypto bill illustrated how traditional finance can mobilize to shape the rules. Exchanges that expand into tokenized securities or payment services will face scrutiny from multiple regulators, and not every platform will clear those hurdles.
There is also the question of whether retail users, who make up the bulk of exchange revenue, actually want an all-in-one financial super-app. The history of fintech suggests that bundling works only if each service is best-in-class. Unbundlers often win when platforms lose focus. Bybit’s challenge is to execute on infrastructure without diluting the trading experience that built its user base. Zhou’s Thursday statement puts a marker down: the days of the standalone exchange are numbered. But the timeline, and the final shape of that infrastructure, remains uncertain.


