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OKX launched ICE Brent and WTI perpetual futures for crypto-native users.
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ICE invested in OKX earlier this year and secured a board seat.
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The move strengthens the growing real-world asset tokenization narrative.
Crypto exchange OKX is no longer stopping at memecoins, perpetual swaps, or token hype cycles. Now it wants oil traders too.
Less than three months after Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) invested in OKX, the exchange announced the launch of ICE Brent and ICE WTI perpetual futures on its platform. That means two of the world’s biggest oil benchmarks are now entering crypto-native rails through OKX’s ecosystem.
And honestly, this isn’t some random side experiment.
ICE Pushes Wall Street Into Crypto Rails
Back in March, ICE disclosed its strategic investment into OKX, securing a board seat while outlining broader plans involving tokenized NYSE securities and licensed OKX spot crypto pricing.
ICE Chair Jeffrey Sprecher previously said the goal was bringing on-chain infrastructure into trading, settlement, and capital formation.
Well, ICE isn’t testing obscure assets here. It’s wrapping Brent and WTI crude benchmarks, as the backbone of global energy pricing into perpetual futures structures familiar to crypto traders. That changes the audience entirely.
Oil Trading Meets Crypto Native Liquidity
OKX says the exchange already serves more than 120 million users globally, giving ICE direct exposure to crypto-native markets traditional financial infrastructure rarely touches.
And that matters because real-world asset tokenization has become one of the market’s biggest narratives this year.
Treasuries moved on-chain. Equities followed. Commodities were always next.
Real World Asset Narrative Keeps Growing
The OKX and ICE partnership now pushes regulated energy market exposure deeper into blockchain infrastructure.
But let’s be real, the bigger story may not be oil itself. It’s that traditional financial giants increasingly want crypto rails instead of competing against them. And with OKX now hosting tokenized exposure tied to global energy benchmarks, the real-world asset race just escalated again.








