About Meigulian: who we are, how we work, why we're credible
Meigulian does one thing: it walks you, step by step and in plain English, through the path of "buying tokenized US stocks (bStocks) on Binance, then withdrawing them to the Binance Web3 wallet to hold yourself." The topic took off suddenly in 2026, but in the English-speaking corners there's little decent, plainly written material — most is either official-announcement prose or marketing copy passed around and rewritten. What we wanted to build is a guide site a beginner can follow and a veteran doesn't feel is fobbing them off.
What this site sets out to solve
Tokenized US stocks sound abstract, but in practice they come down to a few concrete things: how to open an account, where the money comes in, how to buy a TSLAB in the spot section, why withdrawals must use BNB Chain, what you can do with it once it's in your wallet, and which regions simply can't use it. These questions are scattered all over, and we've organized them into one complete line, with details from actually walking it ourselves, so you step into fewer traps and waste less time.
Besides the guides, we built a batch of pure front-end tools — holdings valuation, dividend estimation, gas conversion, DCA, P&L. They all compute in your browser, collect none of the numbers you enter, and exist purely so you can run the numbers before acting.
About the name "Chen Yu"
Let's get this out of the way first: the author byline "Chen Yu" is a pen name, not a real person. We're a small editorial team, writing under an alias for personal-privacy reasons, which is common among content sites, but we feel it should be said plainly when it should be said.
More importantly, we don't invent professional titles or credentials. Elsewhere you may have seen packaging like "ten-year Wall Street trader" or "licensed financial adviser"; we have none of that and won't pretend to. What we can give you is reading the public information thoroughly, walking the flow ourselves, then relaying it to you in plain language — that's all. Treat us as a fellow traveler one step ahead, who got burned too and then figured it out, rather than some authority or expert. That framing is the most accurate.
How we work
Each piece draws on two sources: one is public documentation, blogs and current-page notes from platforms like Binance and BNB Chain, plus verifiable third-party material like Investopedia and SEC notices; the other is details the editorial team noted after actually operating with small accounts. The two together are what produce the concrete descriptions you see, like "remember to pick BNB Chain when withdrawing" or "the gas cost only a little BNB."
Crypto and tokenized securities move fast — the regulatory line shifts, listings are added and dropped, fees are adjusted anytime. So you'll see us repeat one line throughout: everything follows the current pages of platforms like Binance. We try to mark the check date of information (currently June 2026), but the world keeps changing after a page goes live — please keep that firmly in mind.
Why it's worth trusting
We can't lean on titles to vouch for us; we can only earn trust through how we do things:
- Honest disclosure. A pen name is called a pen name, a promotional relationship is laid out in the open; we don't fake neutrality or fake authority.
- A corrections process. When we find we got something wrong, we fix it and record what changed in the corrections log, rather than quietly editing it as if nothing happened.
- Marked check dates. For changeable information like fees, listings and regions, we write ranges, write "follow the official source," write the check date — not a single hard number that looks certain but is long out of date.
Commercial disclosure: how this site makes money
To be clear: this site contains promotional (affiliate) links. If you sign up on Binance through our links using the referral code BNB698, we may receive some reward from the platform, and this costs you nothing extra — your fees don't go up because of it; signing up with the referral code usually gets you a fee discount instead (the exact rate is whatever Binance's page shows and may change with policy).
That's how we keep the site running. But we want the boundary clear: the promotional relationship doesn't change the content itself — risks that should be raised are raised, limits that should be stated are stated. If an article reads like it's hurrying you to open an account, that's us falling short.
And one more we have to keep stressing: everything on this site is education and information sharing only, and does not constitute investment, financial, tax or legal advice. Tokenized US stocks are a high-risk instrument; how you allocate your own money is for you to judge based on your situation, consulting a qualified professional when needed. The fuller risk statement is on the risk disclaimer page.
Contact us
For corrections, feedback or anything else, write to [email protected], or see the contact page for what you can write in about. Start with what tokenized US stocks are and you'll get a good sense of how we write.