Bitget has recorded about $191 million in net capital inflow in the last seven days. According to the data from DeFiLlama, this makes it second only to OKX for centralized exchanges. This capital flow comes after its Stocks 2.0 offering, a tokenized equities product that allows users to trade blockchain-based versions of US stocks and exchange-traded funds (ETFs).
The data from DefiLlama showed that among all centralized exchanges, OKX was the most dominant, recording net inflows amounting to nearly $454 million within the same week period. Bybit came in third place, accounting for about $116 million. Several Bitget’s key competitors have reported negative results. The largest cryptocurrency exchange, Binance, generated roughly $71 million in seven-day net inflows but experienced $695 million in net outflows over the last 24 hours. Gate.io lost some $56 million, while the same can be said about the outflow of $46 million at HTX and $83 million at Bitstamp.
Bitget records massive inflows amid Stocks 2.0 launch
Earlier on June 9, Bitget’s estimated seven-day inflow was at around $177 million, compared with $409 million for OKX and $161 million for Bybit. The discrepancy likely reflects the real-time nature of the data, as deposits and withdrawals continue settling throughout the day. Bitget launched the Stocks 2.0 program on June 4. This program allows users to trade tokenized versions of U.S. equities and ETFs using USDT, with assets issued through Reality, a licensed real-world asset (RWA) issuance platform.
The initial launch involved 36 tokens representing top-tier companies, including Apple, Amazon, Meta Platforms Inc., Tesla, Alphabet, NVIDIA, and Microsoft, along with the QQQ ETF. Bitget CEO Gracy Chen had revealed the intention to introduce about 500 U.S. stocks in seven days since its launch, accounting for “about 98% of trading volume.” Bitget added that the tokens will have a 1:1 economic value to the underlying stocks. Dividends will be settled in USDT, while stock splits and reverse stock splits will be adjusted automatically for the token holders.
Eligible stock tokens could also be used for margin trading, copy trading, and yield-generating products. The basic trading fee on the exchange is 0.1% with maker/taker fees of 0.05% for users who pay in BGB, the native token of Bitget. At the time when Stocks 2.0 was launched, the exchange was already attracting considerable inflows of money. According to the report published in mid-April, Bitget was generating inflows of around $571 million over a period of one week and placed first amongst centralized exchanges.
This suggests Bitget’s latest inflow momentum may not be solely tied to tokenized equities. Data signals also showed that Bitget is holding around $4.9 billion and $4.5 billion worth of total assets and clean assets, respectively, without counting Bitget’s token assets. Bitget is ranked sixth globally in terms of assets after Binance, OKX, Bybit, Bitfinex, and Robinhood. The open interest of Bitget in derivatives trading is estimated to be about $6.1 billion.
The open interest represents an average leverage ratio of about 1.35x. This ratio is lower than the leverage ratios of MEXC at 1.89x and Gate.io at 2.23x. According to Bitget’s June announcement, cumulative volumes for tokenized stock spot trades exceeded the $1 billion threshold by January 2026, accounting for about 89% of Ondo-issued tokenized stocks trading volume in December 2025. Both figures are based on data from company disclosures rather than third-party market-tracking services, leaving some doubts about the sustainability of growth.

