Bybit Launches Three Stock CFDs on TradFi Platform

Bybit Launches Three Stock CFDs on TradFi Platform Thumbnail

Bybit has listed three new stock contracts for difference (CFDs) on its TradFi platform, expanding the crypto exchange’s reach into traditional equity-linked derivatives.

The exchange announced the listing of MU, COHR, and LITE as the latest additions to its TradFi product suite. The three tickers correspond to Micron Technology, Coherent Corp., and Lumentum Holdings, all semiconductor and photonics sector names.

What stock CFDs offer that spot shares do not

A stock CFD is a derivative contract that tracks the price movement of an underlying share. Traders gain exposure to equity price action without owning the stock itself, which means no custody, no shareholder voting rights, and no direct dividend collection.

For users already trading crypto derivatives on Bybit, CFDs follow a familiar leveraged-contract model. The key difference is the underlying asset: instead of BTC or ETH perpetual futures, these contracts reference publicly listed equities on traditional stock exchanges.

Bybit’s TradFi platform documentation positions stock CFDs as a way for crypto-native traders to access equity markets without leaving the Bybit ecosystem. The product sits in a separate section from Bybit’s spot and derivatives crypto markets, signaling a deliberate segmentation of traditional and digital asset offerings.

A controlled rollout, not a full brokerage play

Listing only three instruments at launch suggests Bybit is taking a measured approach. Rather than rolling out hundreds of equity CFDs at once, the exchange appears to be testing demand with a small, focused batch of semiconductor-adjacent names.

The move fits a broader pattern among crypto exchanges exploring multi-asset strategies. Platforms that once offered only Bitcoin and altcoin trading have increasingly added commodities, forex pairs, and now equity-linked products to retain users who might otherwise split activity across multiple brokerages. The recent wave of crypto firms exploring stock-related instruments reflects this same push toward hybrid market access.

Bybit’s choice to brand the product line “TradFi” rather than folding it into its existing derivatives suite is notable. The label creates a clear boundary between crypto-native products and traditional market exposure, which may simplify regulatory positioning in jurisdictions that treat equity derivatives differently from crypto contracts.

With major exchanges tightening compliance and regulators scrutinizing cross-asset platforms more closely, the segmented approach could help Bybit navigate licensing requirements as it scales the TradFi offering beyond three initial listings.

The launch also comes as exchanges face growing pressure to protect users from volatile token events, as seen when platforms have had to issue refunds after sudden token crashes. Stock CFDs tied to regulated equities may offer a more predictable risk profile compared to newer digital assets.

Whether the exchange plans to expand the stock CFD roster, and on what timeline, remains unconfirmed. For now, MU, COHR, and LITE are live and available to eligible Bybit users through the TradFi platform.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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Thiago Alvarez is a crypto and fintech analyst at Coinwy, covering blockchain payments, DeFi protocols, and digital asset regulation. With a background in financial technology and compliance analysis, Thiago focuses on evaluating the operational viability and regulatory positioning of emerging crypto projects. His work examines token economics, cross-border payment infrastructure, and institutional adoption trends across global markets.
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