Kraken is spreading to traditional finances by gaining access to more than 11,000 US shares and listed funds (ETFs), according to a April 14 rack.
The crypto-trading company revealed that its users can now trade Equities Commission via Kraken Securities LLC, a newly launched Finra-regulated arm from the stock market.
The service is available for residents in ten American jurisdictions, including New Jersey, Connecticut, Wyoming, Oklahoma, Idaho, Iowa, Rhode Island, Kentucky, Alabama and Washington, DC, DC, DC
Kraken wants to expand access to more states in the coming months, with worldwide markets such as the VK, Europe and Australia also on the route map.
Bridging Crypto and Traditional Finance
The expansion is in line with Kraken’s wider vision on merging traditional and digital finances.
Kraken wants to remove long -term barriers to investing by integrating access to shares, ETFs, crypto, stablecoins and cash on a single platform.
According to the company, this would make it easier for users to rotate between activa classes without leaving the ecosystem.
Kraken’s Co CEO, Arjun Sethi, pointed out that the move to shares is a natural evolution that lays the foundation for future innovation. He emphasized that Blockchain infrastructure will make the next trade phase limitless, continuous and driven.
He added:
“Crypto not only evolves, it becomes the backbone for trade in asset classes, such as shares, raw materials and currencies. As the demand for 24/7 worldwide access grows, customers want a seamless, all-in-one trading experience.”
The new development follows Kraken’s $ 1.5 billion takeover from Retail Futures Trading Platform Ninjatrader and the reported plans of the Exchange to collect $ 1 billion in debts in preparing a potential initial public offer.
These deals emphasize the growing ambition of the Exchange to be an important player in the convergence of traditional finances and crypto.
Kraken’s access to stock trading also brings it in direct competition with other platforms such as Crypto.com, which introduced commission -free trade for shares and ETFs earlier this year in the US.