Loading prices...
CryptoPulse.media
All news
eToro Puts $12.5M into Onchain Derivatives: Brokers Are Racing into DeFi

eToro Puts $12.5M into Onchain Derivatives: Brokers Are Racing into DeFi

July 3, 2026
7

While Bitcoin consolidates near $60,000 and retail investors sit on the sidelines, traditional financial players are placing bets on the next infrastructure layer. eToro — one of the world's largest social trading platforms with 38 million users — led a $12.5 million funding round in Extended, a decentralized perpetual futures platform that has processed $245 billion in cumulative trading volume since launch, The Block reports.

Extended: $245 billion in volume in 10 months

Extended was founded by former Revolut crypto executives: CEO Ruslan Fakhrutdinov and CTO Dmitrii Krasovskikh. The platform launched in August 2025 under the name X10 on Starknet — an Ethereum Layer 2. It offers perpetual futures with up to 100x leverage across 100+ markets — including crypto and tokenized stocks — without users having to hand over their assets to a centralized custodian. In effect, it is a fully decentralized derivatives exchange, CryptoBriefing notes.

The deal: $12.5M, Zengo, and Jump Crypto

eToro led the $12.5 million round; co-investors include Jump Crypto and Alber Blanc. Together with a previous $6.5 million raise in 2025, Extended has accumulated roughly $19 million in total funding. The key element of the deal is a strategic partnership: Extended's perpetual futures engine will be integrated directly into the Zengo wallet.

Zengo is the self-custodial wallet eToro acquired in April 2026 for roughly $70 million. Its distinguishing features: MPC (Multi-Party Computation) technology that eliminates the need for a seed phrase, plus built-in swaps, staking, and dApp access. Once the Extended integration is complete, Zengo users will be able to trade onchain derivatives while retaining full custody of their assets.

"This is part of a broader strategy to bring DeFi products to our users" — Elad Lavi, EVP at eToro.

The most important thing here isn't the round size — it's the trend. The two largest retail brokers, Robinhood and eToro, are simultaneously building DeFi infrastructure: Robinhood launched its own blockchain and tokenized stock trading, while eToro is going through the Zengo acquisition and now the Extended investment. The logic is the same: users want onchain yield and flexibility, and brokers don't want to cede that traffic to pure DeFi protocols, CoinDesk explains.

The context is telling: eToro's crypto profits fell from $46 million in Q1 2025 to $13 million in Q1 2026. Traditional spot trading is generating less and less — derivatives and DeFi look like the next margin frontier.

Takeaway

eToro's investment in Extended is not a one-off deal — it's a symptom of a structural shift: the line between a traditional broker and a decentralized protocol is disappearing fast. For users, this is good news: competition for their liquidity should drive better products, lower fees, and self-custodial trading becoming the norm rather than the exception.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

Mike Robinson

Author

Mike Robinson

News feed editor

I'm constantly writing about crypto, Bitcoin, and altcoins. I cover a variety of topics related to the virtual currency market.

Comments (0)

No comments yet — be the first!