Want to trade the NASDAQ 100 from a decentralized exchange? Orderly Network just made that a lot easier. The omnichain infrastructure provider launched a permissionless perpetual futures market for $QQQ on June 4, giving any DEX built on its platform the ability to offer leveraged exposure to one of the most widely followed equity benchmarks in the world.
The product tracks the NASDAQ 100 Index, offers up to 20x leverage, and settles all contracts in USDC. No brokerage account required. No KYC. No direct tokenization of the underlying assets. In English: you can now go long or short on the tech-heavy index from the same wallet you use for DeFi yield farming.
Building on a growing RWA portfolio
This isn’t Orderly’s first foray into real-world asset trading. The network has been methodically stacking RWA products over the past several months.
Back in October 2025, Orderly introduced perpetual contracts for the SPX500 and NAS100 indices. In December 2025, it added gold (XAU) and silver (XAG) trading. Individual equities like GOOGL, TSLA, and NVDA have also made the cut.
The $QQQ launch is the latest addition to a portfolio that’s starting to look less like a crypto experiment and more like a decentralized version of a traditional trading desk. The difference is that every product sits on shared orderbooks, accessible across more than 14 blockchain networks, with zero infrastructure costs for the developers plugging into Orderly’s system.
The numbers behind the network
Orderly currently reports $66.41 million in open interest across its platform. More telling is the builder count: 371 live builders are currently active on Orderly’s infrastructure. That’s 371 teams or projects leveraging the same shared liquidity and orderbook system to power their own trading interfaces. Think of Orderly less as a single exchange and more as the plumbing that connects hundreds of smaller exchanges into one coherent liquidity pool.
The omnichain approach is central to this model. Rather than fragmenting liquidity across different chains, Orderly aggregates it. A trader on Arbitrum and a trader on Optimism can effectively be matched against the same orderbook. For a product like $QQQ perpetual futures, where liquidity depth directly impacts execution quality, this architecture matters.
Why RWA perpetuals are gaining momentum
They don’t require the complex legal wrapping that tokenized securities demand. There’s no actual stock being held in custody somewhere. Instead, these are synthetic contracts that track a price feed.
For Orderly specifically, the strategy appears to be about differentiation. The perpetual DEX market is crowded. Platforms like dYdX, Hyperliquid, and GMX all compete for the same pool of on-chain derivatives traders. Adding RWA markets gives Orderly something most competitors don’t offer: a reason for traditional finance-adjacent traders to show up.
The 20x leverage ceiling is worth noting. It’s aggressive enough to attract active traders but restrained compared to some offshore centralized exchanges that offer 100x or more.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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