In a move that shows the accelerating convergence between digital-asset platforms and legacy financial infrastructure, OKX announced a strategic partnership with Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) that includes a minority investment, a board seat for ICE and plans to connect regulated U.S. markets with OKX’s global user base. The deal, which values OKX at roughly $25 billion, marks one of the most prominent recent endorsements by a traditional exchange operator of a major crypto trading venue.
Under the terms the companies described, ICE will license OKX’s spot cryptocurrency prices as the basis for U.S.-regulated futures contracts, a step the pair said would create a compliant route for institutional and retail participants to gain regulated exposure to crypto price movements. The licensing agreement is positioned as the first phase of a broader plan to marry OKX’s market data and liquidity with ICE’s experience operating U.S. futures and derivatives markets.
OKX, which serves more than 120 million accounts globally, said it will also explore ways to provide access to ICE-operated U.S. futures and NYSE tokenized-equities markets to its customers, subject to regulatory approvals. That would mean crypto-native users could, in principle and in the future, access regulated derivative products and tokenized shares through interfaces they already use, while ICE extends its regulated market infrastructure into blockchain-based distribution channels.
Building Next-Generation Market Infrastructure
Industry observers note the timing and scope of the relationship reflect broader trends. Major exchanges and market operators have been experimenting with tokenized securities, digital settlement rails and on-chain market infrastructure for months, and ICE itself has recently expanded crypto-linked product offerings. For OKX, executives framed the partnership as a deliberate re-entry into the United States on “a blank sheet of paper,” aiming to build with regulatory engagement and institutional standards front and center.
Statements from OKX emphasized that the agreement is not merely about technology but about building a durable market infrastructure: improving market structure, strengthening risk-management and clearing frameworks, expanding institutional access, and protecting consumers while fostering innovation. ICE’s board involvement and investment were described as signals of mutual confidence that digital-asset technology will play an enduring role in the future of financial markets .
The alliance also carries a political and regulatory subtext. OKX has in recent years sought to normalize relations with regulators in the U.S. and other major markets as part of an effort to scale responsibly. The company’s pivot toward closer collaboration with established market operators is likely intended to accelerate that effort. While neither party disclosed the full financial terms publicly, the valuation and the structure of the licensing and market-access plans suggest both firms see commercial opportunity in integrating traditional and crypto-native channels.
Market participants will be watching closely for the next steps, including the detailed mechanics of any futures product tied to OKX spot data, the regulatory approvals required in the United States, and how tokenized NYSE-listed securities would be governed and traded when bridged onto blockchain rails. If executed as described, the collaboration could serve as a template for how established exchanges and crypto platforms collaborate, combining deep liquidity and user reach with regulated clearing, custody and risk frameworks. For now, the announcement marks a high-profile example of traditional finance and Web3 infrastructure seeking common ground as digital assets mature.


