For a long time, accessing global stock markets has never been truly simple.

Users can see global companies, real-time prices, and fast-moving market opportunities. But when they actually want to participate, they often have to go through a long financial path: bank accounts, identity verification, currency conversion, cross-border deposits, brokerage onboarding, fund settlement, and trade execution. Every step can introduce new waiting time, new costs, and new uncertainty.

This has always been one of the core contradictions of global investing: information has already become global and real-time, but the path for capital to enter global markets is still built on traditional cross-border financial systems.

For many users, global stock markets are not far away. They can track price movements of companies like NVIDIA, Apple, Tesla, and Microsoft at any time. They can follow the U.S. market, Asian markets, and a wide range of international assets in real time. But seeing opportunities is not the same as accessing them efficiently. The real problem is not a lack of global assets. It is that the path for everyday users to reach those assets remains too complex.

Today, Flux is officially live.

The launch of Flux marks the beginning of a new path: users can start from USDT and connect to global stock markets in a more direct way. Compared with the traditional route that depends on multiple banking layers, cross-border transfers, and account switching, Flux aims to make the connection between on-chain capital and global assets shorter, clearer, and more efficient.

This is not just a change in trading access.

The core problem Flux wants to solve is not creating another trading narrative, nor repackaging a traditional brokerage interface into an app. What Flux truly focuses on is this: now that USDT has become an important carrier of on-chain liquidity worldwide, how can this capital enter global capital markets more efficiently?

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Over the past few years, stablecoins have become more than trading tools inside crypto. For many users, USDT is a familiar, flexible, and globally mobile digital form of capital. It can move on-chain around the clock and transmit value across regions with greater efficiency. But for a long time, this liquidity has mostly remained within the crypto ecosystem, with limited access to stocks, ETFs, and other real-world asset markets.

This means on-chain capital has liquidity, but still lacks an efficient outlet into broader assets.

At the same time, global stock markets remain one of the most important parts of global capital allocation. Stocks represent the growth of real companies, the evolution of global industries, and the core value of long-term capital markets. From technology companies to consumer brands, from financial institutions to energy assets, global stock markets carry some of the most important value in the real economy.

On one side, there is highly liquid USDT.

On the other side, there are global stock markets with deep long-term value.

What Flux is doing is reconnecting these two sides.

For users, the most direct meaning of this connection is a shorter path. In the past, users might need to move funds off-chain first, then go through bank accounts, currency exchange, cross-border deposits, and brokerage accounts before finally entering the stock market. Every additional step weakens capital efficiency. Every conversion makes the user experience heavier.

Flux aims to make this process more direct.

Users should not spend excessive time navigating complex financial procedures. They should not need to constantly switch between accounts, currencies, and systems simply to participate in global assets. Good financial infrastructure should keep complexity behind the system and give users a clearer path forward.

Of course, the value of Flux is not only that it allows users to buy stocks.

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