Following the launch of gold futures in December 2025 and silver futures in January 2026, Binance’s aggregate commodity trading volumes have surged to $70 billion, a development that points to a structural shift in how crypto-native markets are engaging with traditional asset classes.
The CoinDesk Data chart tells the story more precisely than any summary could. Weekly trading volumes for gold and silver on Binance were effectively zero as recently as mid-December 2025. By the week of January 31st, combined weekly volume had climbed past $20 billion. The following week, February 7th, it peaked above $32 billion. The numbers didn’t gradually build. They appeared, almost immediately, at scale.
Gold dominated the early weeks, as would be expected given its longer tenure on the platform. Silver volumes, represented separately in the chart, began contributing meaningfully from late January onward and have maintained a consistent share of weekly totals. The combined $70 billion aggregate figure reflects cumulative volume since launch rather than a single-week figure, but the weekly run rates visible in the chart suggest the demand is structural, not a launch-week spike that faded.
Binance entering commodity futures wasn’t a technical experiment. It was a response to demand that existed within its own user base, traders who were already active in crypto markets and sought exposure to gold and silver without leaving the platform or opening a separate brokerage account.
The concept behind this shift has been described in financial circles as hyperfinancialization, an era in which an expanding range of assets, from equities and commodities to more abstract instruments, becomes tradeable and priceable within digital infrastructure. Blockchains and crypto-native exchanges are increasingly serving as the rails that make that possible, extending their reach beyond digital assets into markets that have historically sat in entirely separate institutional silos.
Binance’s commodity volumes are one of the clearest data points yet that this convergence is not theoretical. Crypto-native traders generated $70 billion in gold and silver trading volume in under three months, on a platform that, until December, offered neither product.
Traditional commodity exchanges and brokerages have long operated on the assumption that their user bases and crypto’s user bases occupy different corners of the financial market. The Binance volume data complicates that assumption.
The demand for broader asset exposure within crypto-native platforms has now been demonstrated at a scale that is difficult to attribute to novelty alone. Whether other major exchanges move to replicate Binance’s commodity offering in the near term, and whether regulators in key jurisdictions respond to the expansion of crypto platforms into traditional asset classes, are questions the $70 billion figure has made more urgent than they were at the start of the year.
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