As crypto markets mature, the lines between digital assets and traditional equities keep dissolving. BIT, a digital asset platform with seven years of institutional service experience, is pushing that boundary further. It has rolled out margin trading for US stocks, accompanied by a promotional offer of up to $2,000 cashback and a 30-day 0% interest margin loan, according to the original announcement. The move signals more than a product addition; it reflects a growing ambition among established crypto exchanges to capture retail equity traders by leveraging existing margin infrastructure.
The Shift from Crypto to Equities
BIT’s entry into US stock margin trading lands at a moment when asset boundaries are thinning globally. While U.S. lawmakers debate legislation that could reshape digital asset custody—and major banks are trying to kill it, as reported in Banks Are Trying to Kill the Biggest Crypto Bill in US History Four Days Before the Senate Vote—BIT is moving ahead with a product that sits at the intersection of both worlds. The exchange is not just competing for crypto volumes anymore; it’s now taking on traditional brokerages in the APAC region.
The blurring of asset classes is not theoretical. In a recent roundup, we saw institutional tokenization hit new milestones, with Bullish buying Equiniti and RWA crossing $20B on-chain. BIT’s launch fits that broader pattern: platforms that built their reputations in crypto are now expanding into the same traditional instruments they once aimed to disrupt. Margin trading for US stocks on a crypto exchange is both a service extension and a strategic land grab.
The offer’s headline figures are aggressive. New and existing users can access a margin loan facility on US equities with zero interest for the first month, alongside cashback rewards that scale up to $2,000. The exact tiers weren’t detailed, but such incentives typically reward higher trading volumes. For active traders who already use leverage on crypto positions, the economics become compelling: they can now apply similar strategies to Apple, Tesla, or any major US stock without paying borrowing costs initially.
BIT has been positioning itself as an institutional-grade venue, and the margin feature extends that narrative. Stock margin trading carries different risk parameters than crypto—volatility is generally lower, liquidity is deeper, and trading hours are fixed—so the platform’s risk engines will be tested differently. That might actually reassure users who are wary of crypto’s wild swings but still want to trade with borrowed capital inside a familiar exchange environment.
A Competitive Signal in the APAC Market
Asian crypto exchanges have spent years layering new products onto their core businesses, from tokenized shares to derivatives and now real stock trading. BIT’s launch puts pressure on other platforms that have been sitting with similar capabilities but haven’t packaged them with such direct incentives. The zero-interest window is a classic customer-acquisition play, designed to move liquidity onto the exchange quickly.
What’s less clear is whether local regulators will treat this as a natural extension of a digital asset license or demand additional approvals. BIT likely has the necessary permissions, but as cross-vertical services multiply, the regulatory net could tighten. A promotion like this also raises the question of sustainability. Zero-interest margin loans are expensive to maintain, and once the 30-day window closes, the real test will be whether the newly onboarded traders stay and pay standard rates. For now, BIT is betting that the short-term cost is worth the long-term user base, and the cashback sweetener may accelerate a migration that was already underway.



















































