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#mystocksquestion

mystocksquestion

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Article
Ask, Answer & Win with Stocks & ETFs InsightsWith Binance’s official launch of [US stocks & ETFs trading](https://www.binance.com/en/support/announcement/detail/8c8fb6809d9c46789306905327e7567a), we are hosting a community Q&A activity. Ask questions about US stocks and ETFs, or answer someone else's questions, and win exclusive Binance 9th year anniversary swags! Activity Period: 2026-06-04 09:30 (UTC) - 2026-06-12 23:59 (UTC) How to Participate: There are two ways to join the activity. Participants can either pick one, or to join both. Option 1: Ask a Question Publish a post with #MyStocksQuestion on Binance Square and ask any question you have about US stocks and/or ETFs. It can be about trading strategies, market trends, how to pick a stock, or even what ETFs are. Format: Ask your question related to US stocks and/or ETFs in English, with the hashtag #MyStocksQuestion Example:How do you decide which US stocks to hold long-term vs. which ones to trade short-term? I've been buying based on news but I'm not sure if that's a good strategy. #MyStocksQuestion Dos & Don’ts:Dos: Be personal and ask questions related to your own experience.Share a real question you have about US stocks and/or ETFs, something you have been wondering about.Give a bit of context, such as how long you've been investing, what your approach is, what's tripping you up.Use hashtag #MyStocksQuestion and ask the question in English.Don’ts: Don't beg for likes or replies.Don’t use Red Packets or similar giveaways to farm replies.Don’t include irrelevant content to farm views or stray from US stocks and ETFs.Don’t edit previously published posts with high engagement to repurpose them for this activity Option 2: Answer a Question Browse the questions on the [topic page](https://www.binance.com/en/square/hashtag/mystocksquestion) of #MyStocksQuestion on Binance Square (i.e. [https://www.binance.com/en/square/hashtag/mystocksquestion](https://www.binance.com/en/square/hashtag/mystocksquestion)), find one you can answer, and contribute your answer to the question in the comment of the question post.  Format:Leave your answer in English in the comment of the question post directly.Example:[In the comment of the question post] Great question! I use a simple rule — if I believe the company will still be growing in 5 years, it goes into my long-term portfolio. If it's riding a short-term trend like earnings season hype, I trade it. News alone isn't enough — look at fundamentals like revenue growth and profit margins.  Dos & Don’ts:Dos: Head to the #MyStocksQuestion [topic page](https://www.binance.com/en/square/hashtag/mystocksquestion), find a question you actually have an answer to.Reply in the comments of that post in English, not as a new post.Answer from your own experience, such as what you've tried, what worked, what didn't.Share your original takes, not textbook definitions, pure AI text or plagiarized text.Don’ts: Don't beg for likes or comments.Don’t use Red Packets or similar giveaways to farm engagement.Comments posted using @BiBi will not be counted.Suspected spam, or artificially inflated comment, or the use of AI bot will be disqualified from the activity. Reward Distribution: Prize A: Best Questions (20 Winners) We will select 20 best questions based on popularity (valid impression and numbers of valid responses it received) and quality (depth). Users who raised those questions will receive 1 set of exclusive Binance 9th year anniversary swag each.The more thought-provoking your question, the more people will reply in the comment, and the better your chances of winning. Prize B: Best Answers (30 Winners) We will select 30 best answers based on popularity (numbers of valid likes & comments it received) and quality (depth). Users who output those answers would receive 1 set of exclusive Binance 9th year anniversary swag each.The more helpful, insightful your answer, the more engagement it will get, and the better your chances of winning. Notes: Binance 9th year anniversary swag set contains:1 jacket,1 backpack,1 silk scarf, and1 Bibi plush keychainRewards shipment will be arranged before 2026-07-05. Winners’ addresses will be collected via Feed Secretary on Binance Square before delivery.If a winner is located in any of the countries or regions listed below, we will not be able to ship the swag reward. In such cases, the winner will receive trading fee rebate vouchers of equivalent value.Iran, Cuba, North Korea and Crimea & non-government controlled areas of Ukraine (Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhya), Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Thailand, UK, Netherlands, Ireland, Luxembourg, Serbia, Albania, USA, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, US Virgin Islands, American Samoa, United States Minor Outlying Islands, Puerto Rico, Canada, Nigeria, Israel, Mauritius, Gibraltar, Yemen, Palestine, and Cyprus.Individual international shipments and customs clearance usually take 3 to 4 weeks.The calculation window of valid impressions, likes and comments is valid until 23:59 (UTC) on day T+1, starting from the content's initial publication.For example, if a user first publishes a valid content on 2026-06-04 20:00 (UTC), the calculation window for valid impressions, likes and comments will be from 2026-06-04 20:00 (UTC) to 2026-06-05 23:59 (UTC). Terms and Conditions: Participants must create the question post and include #MyStocksQuestion, or the post will not be recognized as valid entries. Questions, replies or comments with only emojis, numbers, or meaningless content do not count as valid entries. Suspected spam, or artificially inflated comments under multiple posts, or the use of AI bot will be disqualified from the activity.Comments posted using @BiBi will not be counted.If the same participant qualifies for both Prize A and Prize B, only 1 set of rewards will be sent to the same winner. If the same participant qualifies for multiple positions in Prize A, the valid question with the best popularity (the highest number of impressions and valid replies) and quality (depth) receives the reward. If the same participant qualifies for multiple positions in Prize B, the valid answer with the best popularity (the highest number of valid likes & comments) and quality (depth) receives the reward. This Activity is only available to Binance users who have [completed identity verification](https://www.binance.com/en/support/faq/detail/360027287111).If any participant is found to have suspicious views, artificial engagement, or is suspected of using automated bots to boost volume, they will be disqualified from rewards, and those views will not be counted.Published content must be original. Plagiarism or malicious spamming will result in disqualification.Posts involving Red Packets or giveaways will be deemed ineligible for rewards.Any modification of previously published posts with high engagement to repurpose them for this promotion will result in disqualification.Illegally bulk-registered accounts or sub-accounts shall not be eligible to participate or receive any rewards.Only data from Binance Square posts will be counted for reward calculation.Any posts found to violate the Binance Square Community Guidelines or the Binance Square Community Platform Terms and Conditions will be ineligible for rewards.Participants are required to keep their campaign-related posts published for a minimum of 30 days following the Activity's end date. Deleting posts within this period is not permitted.Winners’ addresses will be collected via Feed Secretary on Binance Square before delivery. Binance will work with logistics partners to cover the Customs clearance cost and other related costs. However, it’s important for the receiver to provide relevant documents required by the Customs and support the clearance process.Should there be a situation where the recipient still receives notification from the courier regarding Customs Clearance fee payment, please contact via Customer Service. It’s not advised for the recipient to pay for the clearance fee and request reimbursement afterward. Any payment made by the recipient without prior communication with Binance will not be reimbursed. Binance reserves the right to disqualify any participants who, in its reasonable opinion, are acting fraudulently or not in accordance with any applicable terms and conditions (e.g., wash trading, illegally bulk account registrations, self-dealing, or market manipulation).Binance reserves the right at any time in its sole and absolute discretion to determine and/or amend or vary these terms and conditions without prior notice, including but not limited to canceling, extending, terminating or suspending this activity, the eligibility terms and criteria, the selection and number of winners, and the timing of any act to be done, and all participants shall be bound by these amendments.Binance reserves the right to disqualify any participants who tamper with Binance program code, or interfere with the operation of Binance program code with other software.Binance reserves the right of final interpretation of this Activity.There may be discrepancies between this original content in English and any translated versions. Please refer to the original English version for the most accurate information, in case any discrepancies arise.

Ask, Answer & Win with Stocks & ETFs Insights

With Binance’s official launch of US stocks & ETFs trading, we are hosting a community Q&A activity. Ask questions about US stocks and ETFs, or answer someone else's questions, and win exclusive Binance 9th year anniversary swags!
Activity Period: 2026-06-04 09:30 (UTC) - 2026-06-12 23:59 (UTC)
How to Participate:
There are two ways to join the activity. Participants can either pick one, or to join both.
Option 1: Ask a Question
Publish a post with #MyStocksQuestion on Binance Square and ask any question you have about US stocks and/or ETFs. It can be about trading strategies, market trends, how to pick a stock, or even what ETFs are.
Format: Ask your question related to US stocks and/or ETFs in English, with the hashtag #MyStocksQuestion Example:How do you decide which US stocks to hold long-term vs. which ones to trade short-term? I've been buying based on news but I'm not sure if that's a good strategy. #MyStocksQuestion
Dos & Don’ts:Dos: Be personal and ask questions related to your own experience.Share a real question you have about US stocks and/or ETFs, something you have been wondering about.Give a bit of context, such as how long you've been investing, what your approach is, what's tripping you up.Use hashtag #MyStocksQuestion and ask the question in English.Don’ts: Don't beg for likes or replies.Don’t use Red Packets or similar giveaways to farm replies.Don’t include irrelevant content to farm views or stray from US stocks and ETFs.Don’t edit previously published posts with high engagement to repurpose them for this activity
Option 2: Answer a Question
Browse the questions on the topic page of #MyStocksQuestion on Binance Square (i.e. https://www.binance.com/en/square/hashtag/mystocksquestion), find one you can answer, and contribute your answer to the question in the comment of the question post.
Format:Leave your answer in English in the comment of the question post directly.Example:[In the comment of the question post] Great question! I use a simple rule — if I believe the company will still be growing in 5 years, it goes into my long-term portfolio. If it's riding a short-term trend like earnings season hype, I trade it. News alone isn't enough — look at fundamentals like revenue growth and profit margins.
Dos & Don’ts:Dos: Head to the #MyStocksQuestion topic page, find a question you actually have an answer to.Reply in the comments of that post in English, not as a new post.Answer from your own experience, such as what you've tried, what worked, what didn't.Share your original takes, not textbook definitions, pure AI text or plagiarized text.Don’ts: Don't beg for likes or comments.Don’t use Red Packets or similar giveaways to farm engagement.Comments posted using @Binance BiBi will not be counted.Suspected spam, or artificially inflated comment, or the use of AI bot will be disqualified from the activity.
Reward Distribution:
Prize A: Best Questions (20 Winners)
We will select 20 best questions based on popularity (valid impression and numbers of valid responses it received) and quality (depth). Users who raised those questions will receive 1 set of exclusive Binance 9th year anniversary swag each.The more thought-provoking your question, the more people will reply in the comment, and the better your chances of winning.
Prize B: Best Answers (30 Winners)
We will select 30 best answers based on popularity (numbers of valid likes & comments it received) and quality (depth). Users who output those answers would receive 1 set of exclusive Binance 9th year anniversary swag each.The more helpful, insightful your answer, the more engagement it will get, and the better your chances of winning.
Notes:
Binance 9th year anniversary swag set contains:1 jacket,1 backpack,1 silk scarf, and1 Bibi plush keychainRewards shipment will be arranged before 2026-07-05. Winners’ addresses will be collected via Feed Secretary on Binance Square before delivery.If a winner is located in any of the countries or regions listed below, we will not be able to ship the swag reward. In such cases, the winner will receive trading fee rebate vouchers of equivalent value.Iran, Cuba, North Korea and Crimea & non-government controlled areas of Ukraine (Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhya), Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Thailand, UK, Netherlands, Ireland, Luxembourg, Serbia, Albania, USA, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, US Virgin Islands, American Samoa, United States Minor Outlying Islands, Puerto Rico, Canada, Nigeria, Israel, Mauritius, Gibraltar, Yemen, Palestine, and Cyprus.Individual international shipments and customs clearance usually take 3 to 4 weeks.The calculation window of valid impressions, likes and comments is valid until 23:59 (UTC) on day T+1, starting from the content's initial publication.For example, if a user first publishes a valid content on 2026-06-04 20:00 (UTC), the calculation window for valid impressions, likes and comments will be from 2026-06-04 20:00 (UTC) to 2026-06-05 23:59 (UTC).
Terms and Conditions:
Participants must create the question post and include #MyStocksQuestion, or the post will not be recognized as valid entries. Questions, replies or comments with only emojis, numbers, or meaningless content do not count as valid entries. Suspected spam, or artificially inflated comments under multiple posts, or the use of AI bot will be disqualified from the activity.Comments posted using @Binance BiBi will not be counted.If the same participant qualifies for both Prize A and Prize B, only 1 set of rewards will be sent to the same winner. If the same participant qualifies for multiple positions in Prize A, the valid question with the best popularity (the highest number of impressions and valid replies) and quality (depth) receives the reward. If the same participant qualifies for multiple positions in Prize B, the valid answer with the best popularity (the highest number of valid likes & comments) and quality (depth) receives the reward. This Activity is only available to Binance users who have completed identity verification.If any participant is found to have suspicious views, artificial engagement, or is suspected of using automated bots to boost volume, they will be disqualified from rewards, and those views will not be counted.Published content must be original. Plagiarism or malicious spamming will result in disqualification.Posts involving Red Packets or giveaways will be deemed ineligible for rewards.Any modification of previously published posts with high engagement to repurpose them for this promotion will result in disqualification.Illegally bulk-registered accounts or sub-accounts shall not be eligible to participate or receive any rewards.Only data from Binance Square posts will be counted for reward calculation.Any posts found to violate the Binance Square Community Guidelines or the Binance Square Community Platform Terms and Conditions will be ineligible for rewards.Participants are required to keep their campaign-related posts published for a minimum of 30 days following the Activity's end date. Deleting posts within this period is not permitted.Winners’ addresses will be collected via Feed Secretary on Binance Square before delivery. Binance will work with logistics partners to cover the Customs clearance cost and other related costs. However, it’s important for the receiver to provide relevant documents required by the Customs and support the clearance process.Should there be a situation where the recipient still receives notification from the courier regarding Customs Clearance fee payment, please contact via Customer Service. It’s not advised for the recipient to pay for the clearance fee and request reimbursement afterward. Any payment made by the recipient without prior communication with Binance will not be reimbursed. Binance reserves the right to disqualify any participants who, in its reasonable opinion, are acting fraudulently or not in accordance with any applicable terms and conditions (e.g., wash trading, illegally bulk account registrations, self-dealing, or market manipulation).Binance reserves the right at any time in its sole and absolute discretion to determine and/or amend or vary these terms and conditions without prior notice, including but not limited to canceling, extending, terminating or suspending this activity, the eligibility terms and criteria, the selection and number of winners, and the timing of any act to be done, and all participants shall be bound by these amendments.Binance reserves the right to disqualify any participants who tamper with Binance program code, or interfere with the operation of Binance program code with other software.Binance reserves the right of final interpretation of this Activity.There may be discrepancies between this original content in English and any translated versions. Please refer to the original English version for the most accurate information, in case any discrepancies arise.
CryptoCeek:
I’m new to US stocks & ETFs on Binance. For someone who already trades crypto actively, what’s the best framework to decide between buying individual stocks, sector ETFs, or broad market ETFs — and how do you manage risk when the market gets volatile? #MyStocksQuestion
Verified
Since Binance listed U.S. stocks, I’ve spent a lot of time observing, studying, and learning from the market. One thing has become increasingly clear to me: the biggest mistake most investors make is buying based on emotions. Looking at my portfolio today, the divergence between Apple (AAPL) and Microsoft (MSFT) presents a classic investment dilemma: momentum versus fundamental value. If I had fresh capital to deploy today, I would choose to accumulate MSFT rather than chase AAPL near its highs. The data seems to support that view: 📊 Valuation: AAPL is trading close to its all-time highs around $307, with a P/E ratio of roughly 37.1x—well above its historical average. Meanwhile, MSFT’s recent 14% pullback has brought its valuation down to a much more attractive P/E of approximately 24.8x. 📈 Business Fundamentals: Microsoft’s recent weakness appears to be driven largely by increased AI-related capital expenditures rather than deteriorating business performance. The company still maintains an outstanding net profit margin of 38.3% and an EBIT margin of 46%, significantly higher than Apple’s 27.1% net margin. Even more importantly, Microsoft’s AI-related revenue continues to grow at an exceptional pace, suggesting that this may be a valuation reset rather than a sign of declining competitiveness. 💡 That taught me a big lesson : Price is what you pay; value is what you get. When markets become overly influenced by short-term sentiment, the real winners are often those willing to accumulate high-quality assets while others focus on recent price action. I wonder Would you rather follow the crowd and seek the comfort of short-term momentum, or take a contrarian approach and pursue a larger margin of safety over the next six months? #MyStocksQuestion #USStocks @Binance_Square_Official
Since Binance listed U.S. stocks, I’ve spent a lot of time observing, studying, and learning from the market. One thing has become increasingly clear to me: the biggest mistake most investors make is buying based on emotions.

Looking at my portfolio today, the divergence between Apple (AAPL) and Microsoft (MSFT) presents a classic investment dilemma: momentum versus fundamental value.

If I had fresh capital to deploy today, I would choose to accumulate MSFT rather than chase AAPL near its highs.

The data seems to support that view:

📊 Valuation:
AAPL is trading close to its all-time highs around $307, with a P/E ratio of roughly 37.1x—well above its historical average. Meanwhile, MSFT’s recent 14% pullback has brought its valuation down to a much more attractive P/E of approximately 24.8x.

📈 Business Fundamentals:
Microsoft’s recent weakness appears to be driven largely by increased AI-related capital expenditures rather than deteriorating business performance. The company still maintains an outstanding net profit margin of 38.3% and an EBIT margin of 46%, significantly higher than Apple’s 27.1% net margin. Even more importantly, Microsoft’s AI-related revenue continues to grow at an exceptional pace, suggesting that this may be a valuation reset rather than a sign of declining competitiveness.

💡 That taught me a big lesson : Price is what you pay; value is what you get. When markets become overly influenced by short-term sentiment, the real winners are often those willing to accumulate high-quality assets while others focus on recent price action.

I wonder Would you rather follow the crowd and seek the comfort of short-term momentum, or take a contrarian approach and pursue a larger margin of safety over the next six months?

#MyStocksQuestion #USStocks
@Binance Square Official
Binance just gave us access to 7,000+ US stocks and ETFs. Zero commission. Starting from $5. Paid in USDT/USDC. That changes everything for global retail investors who couldn't touch US markets before. But here's my real question as someone who trades both crypto and TradFi: How do you actually decide between buying a US stock directly on Binance vs. trading its perpetual contract? I've been using perps for leverage plays on $NVDA and $TSLA but now with direct ownership, dividends, and fractional shares available, I'm rethinking the whole approach. Do you separate them by time horizon? Risk profile? Or is the perp always better for active traders? Genuinely curious how others are structuring this now that both options live in the same app. 👇 #MyStocksQuestion
Binance just gave us access to 7,000+ US stocks and ETFs. Zero commission. Starting from $5. Paid in USDT/USDC.
That changes everything for global retail investors who couldn't touch US markets before.
But here's my real question as someone who trades both crypto and TradFi:
How do you actually decide between buying a US stock directly on Binance vs. trading its perpetual contract?
I've been using perps for leverage plays on $NVDA and $TSLA but now with direct ownership, dividends, and fractional shares available, I'm rethinking the whole approach.
Do you separate them by time horizon? Risk profile? Or is the perp always better for active traders?
Genuinely curious how others are structuring this now that both options live in the same app. 👇
#MyStocksQuestion
Rabbi Mostak Ahmmed:
Stocks for long term investing
Verified
I’ve been trying to learn US stocks for a few months now, and one thing still confuses me. How do people know when a stock is actually “cheap” and not just falling for a reason? A lot of stocks look like good deals after big drops, but then they keep dropping even more. I’ve made that mistake a few times already just because I thought I was “buying the dip”. Do long-term investors wait for specific signals before buying, or is it more about the company itself? Would honestly like to hear how more experienced people approach this. #MyStocksQuestion
I’ve been trying to learn US stocks for a few months now, and one thing still confuses me.

How do people know when a stock is actually “cheap” and not just falling for a reason?

A lot of stocks look like good deals after big drops, but then they keep dropping even more. I’ve made that mistake a few times already just because I thought I was “buying the dip”.

Do long-term investors wait for specific signals before buying, or is it more about the company itself?

Would honestly like to hear how more experienced people approach this. #MyStocksQuestion
Rabbi Mostak Ahmmed:
As a crypto user frist of all it will be difficult to find out but day by day everything wii be improve
In crypto, I learned how to turn small amounts into life-changing money through high-risk plays. But honestly? Staying rich is harder than getting rich. The volatility that once gave me life now gives me anxiety. I’m looking at U.S. Stocks and ETFs not for the thrill, but for peace of mind. My question for the veterans here: When you have a portfolio built on long-term ETFs, how do you fight the psychological urge to 'over-trade' or panic-sell during market corrections? 💡 The ultimate question: How do you teach a wild crypto heart to love the slow, boring, but guaranteed path to wealth? #MyStocksQuestion
In crypto, I learned how to turn small amounts into life-changing money through high-risk plays. But honestly? Staying rich is harder than getting rich. The volatility that once gave me life now gives me anxiety.
I’m looking at U.S. Stocks and ETFs not for the thrill, but for peace of mind.
My question for the veterans here: When you have a portfolio built on long-term ETFs, how do you fight the psychological urge to 'over-trade' or panic-sell during market corrections?
💡 The ultimate question: How do you teach a wild crypto heart to love the slow, boring, but guaranteed path to wealth?
#MyStocksQuestion
Aamirsheerazi:
Great question. My trick is simple: I dont watch the market every day. If I bought an ETF for the next 10 years, a bad month shouldn't change my decision. The more I check prices, the more tempted iam to do something I’ll regret later 😅 Crypto taught me to chase action. ETFs are teaching me that patience is an actual edge.
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Bullish
Hey everyone, 14 years ago, when I was an international student in the US, I really wanted to buy American stocks like #Apple , #Tesla , and #Microsoft . But back then, as a non-US citizen, it was almost impossible for me to open a proper brokerage account. I could only watch from the sidelines. Now, with Binance launching US stocks and ETFs, I can finally invest in the companies I’ve admired for so long. I’m genuinely thankful to Binance for making this possible. It’s a game changer for people like me. That said, I have one big question: For those of us buying through Binance, are the shareholder rights the same as if we bought directly on a traditional US broker? Specifically, do we still get dividends paid out normally? And do we have any voting rights on company matters, or are those limited? I would love to hear from anyone who knows more about this or has experience with it. Thanks in advance! #MyStocksQuestion
Hey everyone,

14 years ago, when I was an international student in the US, I really wanted to buy American stocks like #Apple , #Tesla , and #Microsoft . But back then, as a non-US citizen, it was almost impossible for me to open a proper brokerage account. I could only watch from the sidelines.

Now, with Binance launching US stocks and ETFs, I can finally invest in the companies I’ve admired for so long. I’m genuinely thankful to Binance for making this possible. It’s a game changer for people like me.

That said, I have one big question: For those of us buying through Binance, are the shareholder rights the same as if we bought directly on a traditional US broker? Specifically, do we still get dividends paid out normally? And do we have any voting rights on company matters, or are those limited?

I would love to hear from anyone who knows more about this or has experience with it. Thanks in advance!
#MyStocksQuestion
Arif Hossain BNB:
Congrats—that’s a full-circle moment. 🎉 For Binance’s stock offerings, you’ll typically receive the economic benefits (like dividends, if supported), but shareholder rights such as voting are often limited or unavailable because you may not be the direct registered owner of the shares. Think of it as owning the value of the stock, not always the shareholder seat at the table. #MyStocksQuestion
I've been investing in US stocks for about a year and mostly buy companies that I recognize and use in daily life. Recently I've been wondering whether it's better to keep adding to a few strong positions or diversify into ETFs for more stability. How do experienced investors decide when a portfolio is too concentrated? #MyStocksQuestion
I've been investing in US stocks for about a year and mostly buy companies that I recognize and use in daily life. Recently I've been wondering whether it's better to keep adding to a few strong positions or diversify into ETFs for more stability. How do experienced investors decide when a portfolio is too concentrated? #MyStocksQuestion
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Verified
Article
Tokenized Stocks Feel Like an Upgrade - But Are We Buying Stocks, or Just Better Wrappers?I keep coming back to one question: when a stock becomes tokenized, what actually changes for the investor? On the surface, the appeal is easy to understand. Tokenized equities promise faster settlement, around-the-clock trading, and a cleaner bridge between traditional markets and on-chain finance. The SEC has also been explicit that changing the format of a security to onchain does not change the fact that it is still a security under federal law. In the same statement, it described both custodial tokenized securities and synthetic tokenized securities, which means the label “tokenized stock” can hide very different economic realities. That distinction matters more than most people think. In a custodial model, the token may represent an indirect interest in the underlying share held in custody. In a synthetic model, the holder may only get price exposure, without the same ownership rights as a real shareholder. That is why the current debate is not just about technology — it is about rights, custody, and what investors are really getting when they buy the token. The market is clearly moving in this direction. Ondo Finance has launched a tokenized equity platform for non-U.S. investors with access to more than 100 U.S. stocks and ETFs, and those tokens are backed by securities held at U.S.-registered broker-dealers. Binance has also said it will soon introduce bStocks, after launching U.S. equities trading for eligible users and previewing tokenized securities on its platform. But the pushback is just as real. Reuters reported that the World Federation of Exchanges urged regulators to clamp down on tokenised stocks, arguing that they can mimic equities without providing the same rights or trading safeguards. That is the core tension I keep seeing: the user experience may look like stock ownership, but the legal and market structure underneath may still be much closer to a wrapper, a contract, or a synthetic exposure product. Personally, I think tokenization becomes meaningful only when the rights behind the token are transparent. If it gives me real exposure, clear custody, and protections that match the underlying asset, then I see it as a genuine infrastructure upgrade. If it only gives me a prettier way to track price, then I treat it very differently from a normal share. So my real question is this: If tokenized stocks become mainstream, what would make you trust them enough to use them instead of traditional shares - real shareholder rights, onchain liquidity, lower fees, 24/7 trading, or something else? And where would you draw the line between a true tokenized stock and just a synthetic price wrapper? #MyStocksQuestion $NVDA {future}(NVDAUSDT) $TSLA {future}(TSLAUSDT) $AAPL {future}(AAPLUSDT)

Tokenized Stocks Feel Like an Upgrade - But Are We Buying Stocks, or Just Better Wrappers?

I keep coming back to one question: when a stock becomes tokenized, what actually changes for the investor?
On the surface, the appeal is easy to understand. Tokenized equities promise faster settlement, around-the-clock trading, and a cleaner bridge between traditional markets and on-chain finance. The SEC has also been explicit that changing the format of a security to onchain does not change the fact that it is still a security under federal law. In the same statement, it described both custodial tokenized securities and synthetic tokenized securities, which means the label “tokenized stock” can hide very different economic realities.
That distinction matters more than most people think. In a custodial model, the token may represent an indirect interest in the underlying share held in custody. In a synthetic model, the holder may only get price exposure, without the same ownership rights as a real shareholder. That is why the current debate is not just about technology — it is about rights, custody, and what investors are really getting when they buy the token.
The market is clearly moving in this direction. Ondo Finance has launched a tokenized equity platform for non-U.S. investors with access to more than 100 U.S. stocks and ETFs, and those tokens are backed by securities held at U.S.-registered broker-dealers. Binance has also said it will soon introduce bStocks, after launching U.S. equities trading for eligible users and previewing tokenized securities on its platform.
But the pushback is just as real. Reuters reported that the World Federation of Exchanges urged regulators to clamp down on tokenised stocks, arguing that they can mimic equities without providing the same rights or trading safeguards. That is the core tension I keep seeing: the user experience may look like stock ownership, but the legal and market structure underneath may still be much closer to a wrapper, a contract, or a synthetic exposure product.
Personally, I think tokenization becomes meaningful only when the rights behind the token are transparent. If it gives me real exposure, clear custody, and protections that match the underlying asset, then I see it as a genuine infrastructure upgrade. If it only gives me a prettier way to track price, then I treat it very differently from a normal share.
So my real question is this:
If tokenized stocks become mainstream, what would make you trust them enough to use them instead of traditional shares - real shareholder rights, onchain liquidity, lower fees, 24/7 trading, or something else? And where would you draw the line between a true tokenized stock and just a synthetic price wrapper?
#MyStocksQuestion
$NVDA
$TSLA
$AAPL
Gourav-S:
Real ownership > better packaging. Without shareholder rights, it's just price exposure.
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Bullish
US stock market only runs Monday to Friday, 9:30AM–4PM EST — closed on weekends and public holidays. But Binance is a 24/7 platform — so what actually happens when I try to trade US stocks here outside market hours? On weekends? Late night? Is Binance acting as market maker and controlling the price themselves? Are those prices even accurate or just estimated? Coming from crypto where markets never sleep 365 days a year — this whole schedule thing is genuinely confusing 😅 How does it actually work? 🤔 #MyStocksQuestion
US stock market only runs Monday to Friday, 9:30AM–4PM EST — closed on weekends and public holidays.

But Binance is a 24/7 platform — so what actually happens when I try to trade US stocks here outside market hours? On weekends? Late night?

Is Binance acting as market maker and controlling the price themselves? Are those prices even accurate or just estimated?

Coming from crypto where markets never sleep 365 days a year — this whole schedule thing is genuinely confusing 😅

How does it actually work? 🤔
#MyStocksQuestion
Rabbi Mostak Ahmmed:
Great question! You cannot trade stocks 24/7 because it’s market not open 24/7 as a crypto trader its uneasy for me but we can't do anything. Day by day it will adaptable for all of us
Same Price, Same Asset... But Is It The Same Investment..🤔? A few days ago, most stock and ETF-related products on Binance were mainly designed to follow the performance of the underlying asset. For example, if you compare a Binance $TSLA product with Tesla stock, both charts can look almost identical. Looking only at the price, many investors would assume they're exactly the same thing. However, the chart is only one part of the story. When using products that track an underlying asset, investors should understand how the product works, how it trades, and how it behaves during different market conditions. During periods of high volatility, liquidity imbalances, or when the US stock market is closed, temporary pricing differences can appear even when both products are linked to the same asset. Most crypto investors already understand a similar concept. Owning $BTC or $ETH and owning a Bitcoin or Ethereum ETF may look similar on a chart, but they're not the same investment. One is direct ownership of the asset, while the other provides exposure to its price through an investment vehicle. The same principle applies when comparing stock-linked products with actual stock ownership. This is where many investors get confused. They compare the chart but forget to compare the product itself. What's interesting is that Binance has now introduced direct US Stocks & ETFs trading, bringing actual stock investing much closer to the Binance ecosystem. My biggest takeaway is simple: don't just ask "Does the chart look the same?" Ask "What am I actually buying?" Two products can follow the same asset and show nearly identical price action, but understanding the difference between price exposure and actual ownership can completely change your investment decision. #MyStocksQuestion
Same Price, Same Asset... But Is It The Same Investment..🤔?

A few days ago, most stock and ETF-related products on Binance were mainly designed to follow the performance of the underlying asset.

For example, if you compare a Binance $TSLA product with Tesla stock, both charts can look almost identical. Looking only at the price, many investors would assume they're exactly the same thing.

However, the chart is only one part of the story.

When using products that track an underlying asset, investors should understand how the product works, how it trades, and how it behaves during different market conditions. During periods of high volatility, liquidity imbalances, or when the US stock market is closed, temporary pricing differences can appear even when both products are linked to the same asset.

Most crypto investors already understand a similar concept. Owning $BTC or $ETH and owning a Bitcoin or Ethereum ETF may look similar on a chart, but they're not the same investment. One is direct ownership of the asset, while the other provides exposure to its price through an investment vehicle. The same principle applies when comparing stock-linked products with actual stock ownership.

This is where many investors get confused. They compare the chart but forget to compare the product itself.

What's interesting is that Binance has now introduced direct US Stocks & ETFs trading, bringing actual stock investing much closer to the Binance ecosystem.

My biggest takeaway is simple: don't just ask "Does the chart look the same?" Ask "What am I actually buying?" Two products can follow the same asset and show nearly identical price action, but understanding the difference between price exposure and actual ownership can completely change your investment decision. #MyStocksQuestion
MeowAlert
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Binance keeps expanding beyond crypto, and US Stocks & ETFs (e.g. $MU , $MRVL ) is one of the most interesting additions so far.

Looking at Tesla, the stock price and Binance $TSLA price seem to move almost the same.

So, Is buying TSLA on Binance truly the same as owning Tesla stock through a traditional brokerage account, or are there important differences investors should understand before investing?

A few friends asked me this recently, and I think it's a good discussion topic.

Soon I'll share my view as well.

#MyStocksQuestion
Leila Sisk j8cN:
интересно, есть над чем думать🤝
I’ve started investing in US stocks recently, mostly buying large-cap companies and a few ETFs like S&P 500 index funds. My strategy has been pretty simple: buy on dips and hold, but honestly I still feel confused sometimes. One thing I struggle with is knowing when to actually sell. If a stock goes up 15–20%, I’m tempted to take profit, but then I worry it might keep going higher. On the other hand, if it drops, I’m unsure whether to hold or cut losses. How do you decide when to sell a stock vs. keep holding long-term? Do you follow specific rules or just go by market conditions and conviction? #MyStocksQuestion
I’ve started investing in US stocks recently, mostly buying large-cap companies and a few ETFs like S&P 500 index funds. My strategy has been pretty simple: buy on dips and hold, but honestly I still feel confused sometimes.

One thing I struggle with is knowing when to actually sell. If a stock goes up 15–20%, I’m tempted to take profit, but then I worry it might keep going higher. On the other hand, if it drops, I’m unsure whether to hold or cut losses.

How do you decide when to sell a stock vs. keep holding long-term? Do you follow specific rules or just go by market conditions and conviction?

#MyStocksQuestion
harishj11:
I usually don’t sell just because a stock is up 15–20%. If the company fundamentals are still strong, I prefer to hold long-term and let compounding work. I only sell when the original reason for buying changes, valuation gets too expensive, or I need portfolio rebalancing. For drops, I ask myself: Has the business changed, or just the price? That helps me decide whether to hold or cut losses
I want dividend income eventually, but right now I’m focused on growth. At what point does it make sense to add dividend ETFs (or dividend stocks), and how do you balance yield vs total return without chasing high yields? #MyStocksQuestion
I want dividend income eventually, but right now I’m focused on growth. At what point does it make sense to add dividend ETFs (or dividend stocks), and how do you balance yield vs total return without chasing high yields? #MyStocksQuestion
I’m about 6 months into investing and I keep bouncing between broad ETFs (like S&P 500) and “hot” US tech stocks. How do you decide what % should stay in ETFs vs individual stocks if you want growth but don’t want huge drawdowns? #MyStocksQuestion
I’m about 6 months into investing and I keep bouncing between broad ETFs (like S&P 500) and “hot” US tech stocks. How do you decide what % should stay in ETFs vs individual stocks if you want growth but don’t want huge drawdowns? #MyStocksQuestion
#MyStocksQuestion ​"Can we use our existing crypto balances (like USDT or FDUSD) directly to buy these US Stocks and ETFs, or do we need to pass a separate fiat verification and compliance check for stock trading?"
#MyStocksQuestion
​"Can we use our existing crypto balances (like USDT or FDUSD) directly to buy these US Stocks and ETFs, or do we need to pass a separate fiat verification and compliance check for stock trading?"
I’ve mostly been active in crypto trading for the last few years, but with Binance launching US stocks & ETFs, I’m seriously thinking about building a more stable, long-term portfolio on the side. For those of you already investing in US stocks & ETFs: how do you keep it simple and sustainable over the long run? Do you mostly stick to broad market ETFs (like S&P 500 / Nasdaq) and just DCA regularly, or do you actively pick individual US stocks you believe in and accept higher risk and drawdowns? If you combine long term investing with short term trading, I’d love to know: Roughly how you split your capital between ETFs and individual stocks Any basic rules you follow to avoid over trading your long term portfolio What kind of realistic returns you aim for so you don’t lose motivation and give up halfway Looking for real experiences, not theory. What has actually worked for you over a few years? #MyStocksQuestion
I’ve mostly been active in crypto trading for the last few years, but with Binance launching US stocks & ETFs, I’m seriously thinking about building a more stable, long-term portfolio on the side.

For those of you already investing in US stocks & ETFs: how do you keep it simple and sustainable over the long run?
Do you mostly stick to broad market ETFs (like S&P 500 / Nasdaq) and just DCA regularly, or do you actively pick individual US stocks you believe in and accept higher risk and drawdowns?

If you combine long term investing with short term trading, I’d love to know:
Roughly how you split your capital between ETFs and individual stocks
Any basic rules you follow to avoid over trading your long term portfolio
What kind of realistic returns you aim for so you don’t lose motivation and give up halfway

Looking for real experiences, not theory. What has actually worked for you over a few years?
#MyStocksQuestion
#MyStocksQuestion One thing I’ve been struggling with as a retail investor is deciding which U.S. stocks deserve a long-term place in my portfolio and which ones are better suited for short-term trading. In the past, I often bought stocks simply because they were making headlines or trending in the news. Sometimes it worked, but other times I ended up buying near the top and holding through losses. This made me realize that following news alone may not be the best strategy. How do you decide whether a U.S. stock should be a long-term investment or a short-term trade? Do you focus on fundamentals such as earnings growth, revenue, and competitive advantages, or do you rely more on technical analysis and market sentiment? And how do ETFs fit into your strategy compared with individual stocks? I’m curious to learn how more experienced investors separate long-term opportunities from short-term market noise.
#MyStocksQuestion
One thing I’ve been struggling with as a retail investor is deciding which U.S. stocks deserve a long-term place in my portfolio and which ones are better suited for short-term trading.
In the past, I often bought stocks simply because they were making headlines or trending in the news. Sometimes it worked, but other times I ended up buying near the top and holding through losses. This made me realize that following news alone may not be the best strategy.
How do you decide whether a U.S. stock should be a long-term investment or a short-term trade? Do you focus on fundamentals such as earnings growth, revenue, and competitive advantages, or do you rely more on technical analysis and market sentiment? And how do ETFs fit into your strategy compared with individual stocks?
I’m curious to learn how more experienced investors separate long-term opportunities from short-term market noise.
#mystocksquestion I've been investing in crypto for two years but I'm new to US stocks. When comparing a company like Apple to an ETF that tracks the S&P 500, what metrics should I prioritize to decide where my money has a better long-term risk-reward profile? #MyStocksQuestion
#mystocksquestion I've been investing in crypto for two years but I'm new to US stocks. When comparing a company like Apple to an ETF that tracks the S&P 500, what metrics should I prioritize to decide where my money has a better long-term risk-reward profile? #MyStocksQuestion
#MyStocksQuestion I've been wondering whether I should simplify my approach and allocate more of my portfolio to broad-market ETFs like VOO or QQQ instead of trying to pick winning stocks myself. For investors who have been in the market longer, how do you decide what percentage of your portfolio belongs in ETFs versus individual stocks? Has moving toward ETFs improved your long-term results, or do you still see stock-picking as worth the extra effort? #MyStocksQuestion
#MyStocksQuestion I've been wondering whether I should simplify my approach and allocate more of my portfolio to broad-market ETFs like VOO or QQQ instead of trying to pick winning stocks myself.
For investors who have been in the market longer, how do you decide what percentage of your portfolio belongs in ETFs versus individual stocks? Has moving toward ETFs improved your long-term results, or do you still see stock-picking as worth the extra effort?
#MyStocksQuestion
#mystocksquestion Trading U.S. stocks on Binance can provide investors with access to leading global companies, high liquidity, and convenient portfolio diversification. Key benefits include exposure to sectors such as technology, healthcare, and finance, as well as the ability to participate in the growth of some of the world's largest businesses. However, there are also risks. U.S. stock prices can be highly volatile due to economic data releases, company earnings reports, interest rate changes, and geopolitical events. Investors may also face currency-related risks, regulatory changes, and the possibility of capital loss if stock prices decline. To manage exposure to market volatility, investors can: Diversify across different sectors and asset classes. Invest gradually using strategies such as dollar-cost averaging (DCA). Set clear risk management rules, including stop-loss levels where appropriate. Maintain a long-term perspective rather than reacting to short-term market fluctuations. Regularly review and rebalance their portfolios based on their financial goals and risk tolerance. By combining disciplined risk management with a diversified investment approach, investors can better navigate market uncertainty while pursuing long-term growth opportunities. #MyStocksQuestion
#mystocksquestion Trading U.S. stocks on Binance can provide investors with access to leading global companies, high liquidity, and convenient portfolio diversification. Key benefits include exposure to sectors such as technology, healthcare, and finance, as well as the ability to participate in the growth of some of the world's largest businesses.

However, there are also risks. U.S. stock prices can be highly volatile due to economic data releases, company earnings reports, interest rate changes, and geopolitical events. Investors may also face currency-related risks, regulatory changes, and the possibility of capital loss if stock prices decline.

To manage exposure to market volatility, investors can:

Diversify across different sectors and asset classes.

Invest gradually using strategies such as dollar-cost averaging (DCA).

Set clear risk management rules, including stop-loss levels where appropriate.

Maintain a long-term perspective rather than reacting to short-term market fluctuations.

Regularly review and rebalance their portfolios based on their financial goals and risk tolerance.

By combining disciplined risk management with a diversified investment approach, investors can better navigate market uncertainty while pursuing long-term growth opportunities.

#MyStocksQuestion
I’ve been trading crypto on Binance for the last 2 years but I only started US stocks + ETFs this month and honestly I’m lost. In crypto I used to buy based on Twitter hype and it worked, but I tried the same with TSLA and NVDA and ended up selling at a loss. Now I have just $50/month to invest and I can’t decide if I should DCA into VOO/S&P 500 ETF for 5+ years or try picking individual stocks. For people who switched from crypto to stocks, what 1 rule helped you stop “buying the news” and choose between long-term ETFs vs short-term stock trading? I want to learn from your real experience, not textbook theory. #MyStocksQuestion
I’ve been trading crypto on Binance for the last 2 years but I only started US stocks + ETFs this month and honestly I’m lost. In crypto I used to buy based on Twitter hype and it worked, but I tried the same with TSLA and NVDA and ended up selling at a loss. Now I have just $50/month to invest and I can’t decide if I should DCA into VOO/S&P 500 ETF for 5+ years or try picking individual stocks. For people who switched from crypto to stocks, what 1 rule helped you stop “buying the news” and choose between long-term ETFs vs short-term stock trading? I want to learn from your real experience, not textbook theory. #MyStocksQuestion
Now that Binance finally launched US stocks & ETFs trading I have a real question that's been on my mind. I've spent 5+ years trading crypto reading Elliott Waves, managing risk, timing entries. Charts are second nature to me. But US stocks feel different. With crypto, I'm used to 24/7 markets, high volatility, no closing bell. Now I'm looking at $NVDA , $SPY , $VOOI and I genuinely don't know where to draw the line. Here's my actual question: For someone coming from crypto trading, how do you mentally shift to US stocks & ETFs? Do you apply the same TA rules or does the fundamentals game matter way more here? And when does it actually make sense to hold an ETF long term vs trade it short-term around earnings or macro events? I've been profitable in crypto. But I don't want to carry bad habits into a completely different market. Would love to hear from people who trade both. What clicked for you? #MyStocksQuestion
Now that Binance finally launched US stocks & ETFs trading I have a real question that's been on my mind.
I've spent 5+ years trading crypto reading Elliott Waves, managing risk, timing entries. Charts are second nature to me.

But US stocks feel different. With crypto, I'm used to 24/7 markets, high volatility, no closing bell. Now I'm looking at $NVDA , $SPY , $VOOI and I genuinely don't know where to draw the line.

Here's my actual question:
For someone coming from crypto trading, how do you mentally shift to US stocks & ETFs? Do you apply the same TA rules or does the fundamentals game matter way more here? And when does it actually make sense to hold an ETF long term vs trade it short-term around earnings or macro events?

I've been profitable in crypto. But I don't want to carry bad habits into a completely different market.

Would love to hear from people who trade both. What clicked for you?
#MyStocksQuestion
Marzungo:
Nei mercati finanziari "tradizionali" l' attenzione alle questioni globali, in ogni comparto, deve essere molto ampia.
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