Gold has
taken over retail futures trading on crypto exchanges in 2026, and fresh
quarterly data from MEXC shows the flow has only become more concentrated. The
Seychelles-based exchange said its tokenized gold product XAUT alone accounted
for 71% of combined volume among its top 10 TradFi Futures in the first
quarter, with silver adding another 22%.
Singapore Summit: Meet the largest
APAC brokers you know (and those you still don’t!)
Together,
the two instruments absorbed 93% of top 10 activity between January and March,
according to the company’s Q1 TradFi report published today (Wednesday).
MEXC said its gold futures reached a 27.4% share of
the crypto futures market for the category in Q1, ranking second industry-wide
by its own measurement. In February alone the figure climbed to 30.3%,
narrowing the gap with the top-ranked platform to four percentage points.
Silver sat
at 14.6% for the quarter, with a month-over-month gain of more than six
percentage points in March, the fastest acceleration among comparable venues
the company identified. Paxos-issued PAXG placed fifth in the top 10.
Vugar Usi Zade, Bitget’s COO
“Gold
and oil volatility created a window of opportunity and lucrative entry points
for those who are prepared,” MEXC chief operating officer, Vugar Usi Zade,
commented.
“We
positioned ourselves ahead of the curve with the right instruments, deep
liquidity ready to execute large orders, and a frictionless fee model.”
Total
TradFi volume surged 138% in February from the previous month and gained
another 45% in March, MEXC said. Monthly active traders grew a cumulative 58%
over the quarter. The exchange’s own rankings and methodology have not been
independently audited.
Bullion’s Rally Keeps
Pulling Retail Flow In
Safe-haven
demand set the backdrop for the quarter. Gold broke above $5,000 per ounce for
the first time in January and reached $5,595 on January 29, before a sharp two-day correction wiped out
close to $1,200.
A Reuters
poll of 30 analysts in February pegged the median 2026 gold forecast at
$4,746.50 per troy ounce, the highest consensus in the poll’s history going
back to 2012. Major banks including Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Wells Fargo
hold year-end targets between $5,400 and $6,300.
Silver
followed a similar pattern, hitting a lifetime high of $121.64 on January 29
before retreating toward $90. CME
Group shifted gold, silver, platinum and palladium futures margins from
fixed amounts to percentage-based requirements in early January to cope with
the volatility, while liquidity providers adjusted spreads across the board.
Crude oil
also caught a bid as tensions in the Middle East escalated through late
February and March. MEXC said its largest single day of Q1 volume came on March
3.
Crypto Platforms Race to
Capture Commodity Flow
The MEXC
numbers fit a broader pattern that has defined the first quarter across the
digital-asset industry. Binance launched round-the-clock perpetual
contracts on gold and silver in early January, with gold listed on January 5 and silver on
January 7, both settling in USDT.
BingX
rolled out its own TradFi Futures product days later and reported that gold contracts alone
were generating more than $500 million a day, roughly half of its $1 billion daily TradFi
volume when bullion pushed through $4,722 in mid-January. Bitget ran a similar
multi-asset suite out of private beta during the same window.
The trend
extends to institutional venues. LMAX Group added gold to its
perpetual futures platform in mid-February, citing institutional demand for weekend and
round-the-clock exposure, and GCEX rolled out gold futures aimed at CFD desks
around the same time. Not every major exchange is playing along.
OKX said in late January it was monitoring the rush but did
not plan to follow rivals into real-world asset trading, preferring to focus on
crypto infrastructure.
The product
structure on these crypto venues resembles contracts-for-difference more
closely than regulated exchange-traded futures, and the regulatory perimeter
varies sharply by jurisdiction.
In a recent interview with FinanceMagnates.com, Zade said the traditional
separation between CFD and crypto trading had started to feel like “an
unnecessary distance,” a view the Q1 numbers now appear to underscore.
Q1 2026 Market Share: MEXC
TradFi Futures
Category
Q1 share
Industry rank
Note
Gold futures
27.4%
2nd
30.3% in
February; gap to leader narrowed to 4pp
Silver futures
14.6%
3rd
+6pp
month-over-month in March
Crude oil (WTI + Brent)
15.3%
3rd
Two months after launch
Source:
MEXC Q1 2026 TradFi Report. Figures reflect MEXC’s own measurement and have not
been independently verified.
Liquidity Claims Rest on
MEXC’s Own Depth Test
MEXC also
reported ranking first among seven major crypto platforms for gold order book
depth at the top five price levels, in a live snapshot taken on March 23. The
platforms tested were BingX, Binance, Hyperliquid, Bitget, Bybit and OKX
alongside MEXC itself, with three venues covered for crude oil. MEXC said its
gold depth at the top of book was 7.2 times the median of competing platforms.
In a
standardized 100,000 USDT market-order test conducted on the same date, MEXC
said its gold slippage came in 43% below the industry median, silver 66% below,
WTI 25% below and Brent more than 54% below.
The
methodology and raw order book data have not been audited by a third party,
though MEXC said the figures are verifiable on each venue in real time.
The
exchange said the number of available TradFi instruments grew 62%
quarter-over-quarter, and that its wider user base now exceeds 40 million
across more than 170 markets.
The
company’s operating perimeter remains a live issue in several jurisdictions,
including Hong Kong, where the Securities and Futures Commission previously
issued a public warning about the platform.
Gold has
taken over retail futures trading on crypto exchanges in 2026, and fresh
quarterly data from MEXC shows the flow has only become more concentrated. The
Seychelles-based exchange said its tokenized gold product XAUT alone accounted
for 71% of combined volume among its top 10 TradFi Futures in the first
quarter, with silver adding another 22%.
Singapore Summit: Meet the largest
APAC brokers you know (and those you still don’t!)
Together,
the two instruments absorbed 93% of top 10 activity between January and March,
according to the company’s Q1 TradFi report published today (Wednesday).
MEXC said its gold futures reached a 27.4% share of
the crypto futures market for the category in Q1, ranking second industry-wide
by its own measurement. In February alone the figure climbed to 30.3%,
narrowing the gap with the top-ranked platform to four percentage points.
Silver sat
at 14.6% for the quarter, with a month-over-month gain of more than six
percentage points in March, the fastest acceleration among comparable venues
the company identified. Paxos-issued PAXG placed fifth in the top 10.
Vugar Usi Zade, Bitget’s COO
“Gold
and oil volatility created a window of opportunity and lucrative entry points
for those who are prepared,” MEXC chief operating officer, Vugar Usi Zade,
commented.
“We
positioned ourselves ahead of the curve with the right instruments, deep
liquidity ready to execute large orders, and a frictionless fee model.”
Total
TradFi volume surged 138% in February from the previous month and gained
another 45% in March, MEXC said. Monthly active traders grew a cumulative 58%
over the quarter. The exchange’s own rankings and methodology have not been
independently audited.
Bullion’s Rally Keeps
Pulling Retail Flow In
Safe-haven
demand set the backdrop for the quarter. Gold broke above $5,000 per ounce for
the first time in January and reached $5,595 on January 29, before a sharp two-day correction wiped out
close to $1,200.
A Reuters
poll of 30 analysts in February pegged the median 2026 gold forecast at
$4,746.50 per troy ounce, the highest consensus in the poll’s history going
back to 2012. Major banks including Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Wells Fargo
hold year-end targets between $5,400 and $6,300.
Silver
followed a similar pattern, hitting a lifetime high of $121.64 on January 29
before retreating toward $90. CME
Group shifted gold, silver, platinum and palladium futures margins from
fixed amounts to percentage-based requirements in early January to cope with
the volatility, while liquidity providers adjusted spreads across the board.
Crude oil
also caught a bid as tensions in the Middle East escalated through late
February and March. MEXC said its largest single day of Q1 volume came on March
3.
Crypto Platforms Race to
Capture Commodity Flow
The MEXC
numbers fit a broader pattern that has defined the first quarter across the
digital-asset industry. Binance launched round-the-clock perpetual
contracts on gold and silver in early January, with gold listed on January 5 and silver on
January 7, both settling in USDT.
BingX
rolled out its own TradFi Futures product days later and reported that gold contracts alone
were generating more than $500 million a day, roughly half of its $1 billion daily TradFi
volume when bullion pushed through $4,722 in mid-January. Bitget ran a similar
multi-asset suite out of private beta during the same window.
The trend
extends to institutional venues. LMAX Group added gold to its
perpetual futures platform in mid-February, citing institutional demand for weekend and
round-the-clock exposure, and GCEX rolled out gold futures aimed at CFD desks
around the same time. Not every major exchange is playing along.
OKX said in late January it was monitoring the rush but did
not plan to follow rivals into real-world asset trading, preferring to focus on
crypto infrastructure.
The product
structure on these crypto venues resembles contracts-for-difference more
closely than regulated exchange-traded futures, and the regulatory perimeter
varies sharply by jurisdiction.
In a recent interview with FinanceMagnates.com, Zade said the traditional
separation between CFD and crypto trading had started to feel like “an
unnecessary distance,” a view the Q1 numbers now appear to underscore.
Q1 2026 Market Share: MEXC
TradFi Futures
Category
Q1 share
Industry rank
Note
Gold futures
27.4%
2nd
30.3% in
February; gap to leader narrowed to 4pp
Silver futures
14.6%
3rd
+6pp
month-over-month in March
Crude oil (WTI + Brent)
15.3%
3rd
Two months after launch
Source:
MEXC Q1 2026 TradFi Report. Figures reflect MEXC’s own measurement and have not
been independently verified.
Liquidity Claims Rest on
MEXC’s Own Depth Test
MEXC also
reported ranking first among seven major crypto platforms for gold order book
depth at the top five price levels, in a live snapshot taken on March 23. The
platforms tested were BingX, Binance, Hyperliquid, Bitget, Bybit and OKX
alongside MEXC itself, with three venues covered for crude oil. MEXC said its
gold depth at the top of book was 7.2 times the median of competing platforms.
In a
standardized 100,000 USDT market-order test conducted on the same date, MEXC
said its gold slippage came in 43% below the industry median, silver 66% below,
WTI 25% below and Brent more than 54% below.
The
methodology and raw order book data have not been audited by a third party,
though MEXC said the figures are verifiable on each venue in real time.
The
exchange said the number of available TradFi instruments grew 62%
quarter-over-quarter, and that its wider user base now exceeds 40 million
across more than 170 markets.
The
company’s operating perimeter remains a live issue in several jurisdictions,
including Hong Kong, where the Securities and Futures Commission previously
issued a public warning about the platform.





















