OKX launched perpetual futures contracts for nine U.S. equities and ETFs on March 4, 2026, giving crypto-native traders leveraged exposure to traditional stock market names using USDT as collateral.
The nine instruments are NVDA, MU, SNDK, GOOGL, MSFT, AAPL, META, QQQ, and SPY. They rolled out in 15-minute intervals starting at 07:00 UTC, with SPY/USDT going live last at 09:00 UTC. The staggered schedule is standard practice for managing liquidity stress on launch day.
The list is not random. Six of the nine are mega-cap tech names that crypto traders already treat as macro proxies. QQQ and SPY are index ETFs, meaning traders can now take a position on the entire Nasdaq 100 or S&P 500 from inside a crypto exchange. MU (Micron) and SNDK (SanDisk, recently relisted after Western Digital’s spinoff) are semiconductor names with direct AI infrastructure exposure. The selection reads like someone built it specifically for the crypto audience’s existing obsessions: AI, semiconductors, big tech.
A perpetual future (perp) has no expiry date. Unlike a traditional futures contract that forces settlement at a fixed date, a perp stays open indefinitely, with a funding rate mechanism keeping its price anchored to the spot price. If the perp trades above spot, longs pay shorts. If below, shorts pay longs. This keeps the contract honest without requiring physical settlement.
USDT settlement means no actual shares change hands. A trader going long AAPL/USDT on OKX does not own Apple stock, has no voting rights, receives no dividends, and has no claim if Apple were acquired. What they have is a price exposure instrument that rises and falls with the underlying. That distinction matters legally and practically.
Leverage runs from 0.01x to 5x. That is conservative by crypto standards, where 20x, 50x, even 100x is common on coin perps. The low ceiling likely reflects regulatory caution and the different volatility profile of equities versus crypto assets. A 5% move in NVDA is a big day. A 5% move in Bitcoin is a Tuesday.
OKX specifies “supported jurisdictions,” which excludes U.S. users by default. American traders cannot legally access these contracts through OKX. The target audience is the large pool of crypto-native traders in Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and Latin America who want U.S. equity exposure without opening a brokerage account, dealing with currency conversion, or navigating local stock market access barriers.
For someone in a country where opening a U.S. brokerage account is difficult or slow, a USDT-settled perp on SPY is a genuinely faster route to that exposure. Whether it is a better route depends on the funding rates, the spread, and how well the contract tracks the underlying during periods of stress. Those numbers are not yet available for these specific listings.
OKX is not the first to do this. Binance offered tokenized stocks briefly in 2021 before regulatory pressure forced it to shut them down. FTX ran equity perps before its collapse. The concept keeps returning because the demand is real. Crypto traders want to express views on traditional markets without leaving their native environment.
What is different now is the regulatory climate has shifted in some jurisdictions, and the surviving large exchanges are better capitalized and more compliance-focused than the 2021 versions of themselves. Whether that makes this iteration more durable is the open question. The demand is not in doubt. The regulatory tolerance, particularly as U.S. equity derivatives on offshore crypto venues draw closer scrutiny, is harder to predict.
Nine tickers are already launched. The more interesting number is how many are still trading six months from now.
The post OKX Is Now Letting Crypto Traders Bet on Apple, Nvidia, and S&P 500 Without Leaving the Exchange appeared first on ETHNews.


