XT has added seven new USDT-margined perpetual futures contracts to its platform, expanding the exchange’s derivatives lineup with both higher- and lower-leverage pairs.
The new listings are BOTUSDT, WENUSDT, INTWUSDT, SNXXUSDT and XBIUSDT, each offered with leverage of up to 25x. BNCUSDT and FWDIUSDT were also listed, but with a lower cap of 10x leverage. XT said the contracts went live on July 9, 2026, UTC.
Perpetual futures are derivatives that track the price of an underlying asset without an expiry date. On crypto exchanges, they are commonly used by traders looking to take leveraged long or short positions, which is why new contract listings often draw attention from active market participants.
The announcement did not include any trading-volume targets, launch promotions or changes to the underlying spot market for the seven tokens. It also did not provide details on margin requirements beyond the stated leverage limits. For now, the key confirmed change is simply the addition of more tradable contracts on XT’s futures platform.
XT framed the rollout as part of its TradFi perpetual futures offering, a product category that has become a standard way for exchanges to broaden derivatives coverage around newer and smaller-cap tokens. The mix of 25x and 10x leverage suggests the venue is assigning different risk settings to different contracts, but the notice stops short of explaining the criteria behind those caps.
For traders tracking these names, the next item to watch is whether XT issues follow-up notices on contract specifications, maintenance margin, or liquidity support. Until then, the market only has one hard fact to work with: seven more USDT perpetual futures pairs are now listed on XT.
XT adds seven new USDT futures contracts with up to 25x leverage to expand trading options
XT exchange introduced seven new USDT-margined futures contracts allowing traders to buy or sell positions with leverage up to 25 times. This update affects traders seeking more options to speculate on smaller or newer tokens using borrowed funds.