OKX

OKX is the second-largest offshore crypto exchange by trading volume and arguably the most aggressive in expanding beyond pure trading into payments, institutional services, and now direct equity stakes in regulated exchanges. The coverage here tracks what matters: global expansion moves including the Coinone stake talks in South Korea, the Gopax precedent set by Binance, and how OKX positions itself in Asia’s tightly regulated markets without a local license, product launches from the OKX Card with Mastercard and Circle to the Agent Payments Protocol built for AI-driven commerce across Ethereum, Base, Sui, and Aptos, institutional infrastructure like the BitGo off-exchange settlement integration and the push into prime brokerage services for funds that need third-party custody, regulatory friction including the DAXA complaint over unauthorized promotion to Korean users and the broader question of how an offshore exchange operates in markets that require domestic registration, and OKX Chain and Web3 wallet developments as the company builds its own DeFi stack while simultaneously buying into centralized venues. OKX moves differently from Binance. It does not dominate through sheer volume. It targets specific markets, builds payment rails, and acquires stakes rather than whole companies. A Coinone deal would give it a licensed Korean seat. The Mastercard card puts it inside European retail wallets. The AI agent protocol positions it for machine-to-machine payments before most exchanges have even considered the category. Coingo covers the deals, the product rollouts, the regulatory battles, and the strategic question at the center of it all: whether an offshore exchange can buy its way into legitimacy one market at a time.