Ledger, a French digital asset security company known for its hardware wallets, has integrated OKX DEX into its Wallet app, allowing users to perform multi-chain token exchanges directly from the self-monitoring environment.
According to the company, integration assures access OKX DEX liquidity aggregation from the Ledger Wallet app, allowing users to exchange tokens when they need to interact with external decentralized exchange interfaces.
Ledger said trades are routed using OKX DEX’s patented X-Routing technology, which aggregates liquidity across hundreds of decentralized exchanges to identify capable execution paths. Transactions remain signed on the user’s Ledger device, and private keys never leave the hardware wallet.
A Ledger spokesperson told Cointelegraph that access to the OKX DEX integration is being rolled out gradually, with availability to approximately 20% of Ledger Wallet users starting today, with no device firmware or app updates required.
At launch, swaps are supported on Ethereum (ETH), Arbitrum (ARB), Optimism (OP), Base (BASE), Polygon (POL), and BNB Chain (BNB), with no cross-chain or cross-chain swaps enabled.
OKX DEX is a decentralized exchange aggregator within OKX an ecosystem that routes trades through multiple onchain liquidity systems, independent of the company’s centralized exchange.
Related: Uniswap lands on X Layer OKX as exchange deepens DeFi strategy
Cryptocurrency IPO expected in 2026
The integration follows January reports that Ledger is exploring a U.S. initial public offering that could value the company at more than $4 billion, with Goldman Sachs, Jefferies and Barclays involved in early discussions.
While Ledger wouldn’t confirm the reports, if true, it would join a growing list of crypto companies eyeing stock exchanges this year.
In January, tokenization platform Securitize unveiled plans to go public via a merger with a blank check company backed by Cantor Fitzgerald, revealing in related filings that its revenue grew more than 840% by September 2025.
That same month, digital asset custodian Copper was reported to be considering options to go public, although the company said it was not currently planning an initial public offering.
U.S. cryptocurrency exchange Kraken is also expected to go public in 2026. In November, Kraken said it had confidentially filed a draft registration statement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, taking a formal step toward a potential initial public offering of its common stock.
But on Tuesday, multiple media outlets reported that the company’s chief financial officer, Stephanie Lemmerman, had been ousted. Her name does not appear on the management website of Payward, Kraken’s parent, which currently lists Robert Moore, former vice president of business expansion, as deputy chief financial officer.
Inquiries regarding the switch to Payward and Kraken sent by CoinTelegraph were not immediately answered.
Warehouse: Important questions: Should you sell your Bitcoin for nickels for a 43% profit?
