Bitget Wallet adds over 130 tokenized equities through xStocks integration
Bitget Wallet is adding xStocks to give self custody users something that looks a bit more like a brokerage shelf inside a crypto wallet. That is the pitch, at least. My read: this is less about novelty and more about keeping the user inside one app. One app. More assets. Fewer excuses to leave.

Bitget Wallet has integrated xStocks, adding more than 130 tokenized equity products and taking its real world asset lineup above 300 assets. The company says its 90 million plus users can now access tokenized stocks, ETFs, commodities, precious metals, and index linked assets from the same mobile interface they already use for crypto trading. xStocks offers tokenized exposure to major US equities and ETFs, and describes the products as 1:1 backed by the underlying securities.
Most wallet launches get framed as feature expansion. That is only half right. This is a market structure bet: crypto users may want stock market exposure without opening a brokerage app, and wallets want to become the place where that habit forms. In market terms, ETH is probably the cleaner lens, since much of the real world asset trade still depends on onchain settlement, liquidity design, and wallet distribution. For context, spot Bitcoin ETFs began trading in the US in January 2024 after the SEC approved them on January 10, 2024, giving BTC a regulated wrapper for traditional investors. Tokenized equities reverse that route. They bring traditional market exposure into crypto native interfaces.
The flow angle is hard to miss. When interest rates stay restrictive, traders look for yield and liquidity. They also look for a better place to park capital between trades. Tokenized stocks and ETFs now compete for attention inside wallets that used to revolve around BTC, ETH, stablecoins, and DeFi tokens. xStocks says reported transaction volume has passed $30 billion after topping $25 billion earlier this year. Big number. Still, I would want to know how much volume remains after launch incentives fade.
Regulation is the awkward part underneath all of this. According to the source, Bitget Wallet’s launch supports a self custodial trading flow for xStocks, so users can access tokenized equities without a traditional brokerage account or custodial intermediary. For COIN, the question is whether listed crypto platforms can keep their regulated exchange premium as wallet native venues start carrying products that look a lot like brokerage inventory. For ETH, the question is simpler: does real world asset volume become steady demand, or does it become another rewards led burst that cools off later?
Why does this matter? Because access is no longer just about what an exchange lists. It is about where liquidity appears when a user already has capital sitting in a wallet. Bitget Wallet said the integration supports RFQ and AMM based liquidity models, which should make trading smoother and access less tied to traditional market hours. Counter to the usual advice, the asset count is not the first thing I would watch here. Liquidity design is.
BTC and ETH trade all day, every day. US equities still revolve around exchange sessions. Tokenized equities are trying to close that gap for users who already expect weekend liquidity, wallet access, fewer account layers, and fast movement between assets. Is this overkill for a wallet product? Not if the wallet is trying to become the trading surface itself.
Bitget Wallet had already expanded its tokenized stock and ETF lineup through Ondo Finance, taking its onchain equities suite above 200 assets before the xStocks integration. The wallet’s real world asset shelf now exceeds 300 assets. In market structure terms, Bitget Wallet is starting to look less like a single purpose crypto wallet and more like an asset routing layer. I would not overrate the 300 assets headline by itself, though. Investors should watch whether stablecoins keep acting as the settlement asset for these tokenized equity flows. That detail may matter more than the headline asset count.
The source also includes comments from two executives. Alvin Kan, COO of Bitget Wallet, said the integration expands the wallet’s all in one asset shelf by putting crypto, tokenized stocks, and ETFs inside one self custodial interface. Val Gui, GM of xStocks, said tokenized equities should not sit in separate silos and should be available in the wallets users already trust. Bitget Wallet is also offering a 20% xPoints bonus tied to the launch, described as the first wallet specific boost in the xPoints program. We should be blunt here: incentives can make early adoption look cleaner than it is.
What this means
Real world assets are moving into wallet distribution, not just institutional tokenization pilots. The crypto market read starts with ETH, then BTC, then COIN. ETH matters because onchain finance needs settlement and liquidity venues. BTC matters because ETF demand showed that wrapped market access can attract serious capital. COIN matters because brokerage like wallet products put pressure on exchange positioning. Yes, that sounds like three clean buckets. It is messier than that. The real test is whether Bitget Wallet’s 90 million plus users actually trade these 130 plus xStocks products once the launch push settles down, or whether the 20% xPoints bonus does most of the early work.
Next, watch CME data for BTC and ETH positioning around the FOMC decision on June 17, 2026. Macro appetite will decide whether traders reach for risk assets or sit in cash like instruments. Tokenized equity volume also needs scrutiny. xStocks has already reported more than $30 billion after passing $25 billion earlier this year, so the next useful signal is whether growth continues after incentives stop carrying the load. If BTC and ETH liquidity tightens while RWA activity keeps rising, tokenized equities may become a real wallet native trading lane instead of a side product people try once and forget.
