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Win for Crypto Pricing, Loss for Tokenized Access


SpaceX’s hotly anticipated public debut on June 12 raised $75 billion at $135 per share, valuing the company at more than $2 trillion and turning its founder, Elon Musk, into the world’s first trillionaire.

And it’s not only Musk getting wealthier. Buyers who got in at the offer price made roughly 20% almost overnight, while early private investors saw far larger gains.

Crypto traders, meanwhile, were abruptly cut out of the deal, left holding pre-IPO subscription tokens on platforms like Binance, Bybit and Bitget with no allocation to SpaceX at all.

As SPCX shares soared, key tokenized equity pipelines broke down. Intermediaries failed to secure allocations, campaigns were abruptly canceled, and platforms scrambled to issue refunds and damage control.

In effect, it’s a stress test for the “tokenized IPO access” narrative; price discovery worked, but access to the underlying shares did not.

Pre-IPO perps as a parallel price signal

According to Talos Research data shared with Cointelegraph on June 15, in the 30 minutes before the Nasdaq open, SPCX perpetuals traded at a volume-weighted average price (VWAP) of $159.89 across Hyperliquid, Binance and OKX, around 6.6% above the opening print, while Cerebras (CBRS) perps on Hyperliquid were within 1.3% of the Nasdaq open.

It’s also worth noting SPCX perps peaked above $220 in mid-May before gradually converging lower toward the IPO date as traders incorporated more realistic valuation expectations, Talos Research said.

SpaceX aggregated VWAP across venues, May 17 – June 8. Source: Talos

Pre-IPO perpetuals on derivatives platforms showed that onchain traders could generate credible price discovery and deep liquidity for a hot tech unicorn before a single share changed hands. They flashed a real-time indication of where speculators thought the stock would land by the opening bell.

Related Crypto Biz: SpaceX fuels tokenization’s next boom

“These signals will become increasingly difficult for underwriters and retail-facing platforms to ignore,” Samar Sen, head of international markets at Talos, told Cointelegraph, “particularly for high-profile listings where there is already active global demand before the IPO.”

He said these markets could “become a useful supplementary input alongside institutional orders, private market marks and comparable-company analysis.”

Why tokenized SpaceX “IPO access” collapsed at the last mile

The problem, then, was not with synthetic, futures-style exposure to SpaceX’s valuation. Pre-IPO perpetuals “functioned as intended,” Sen said, proving to be “a venue for continuous trading and price discovery ahead of the listing.”

Talos Research showed that SPCX perpetual markets recorded roughly $4.6 billion in trading volume on the day of IPO, with total open interest peaking near $500 million across eight venues, including Hyperliquid, Binance, OKX and Kraken, while Cerebras (CBRS) on Hyperliquid saw $281 million in IPO day volume.

Perpetuals traders were able to monetize both the pre-IPO volatility and the post-listing convergence. But investors who bought tokenized claims on SpaceX IPO shares missed out on the upside entirely.

The SpaceX IPO was four times oversubscribed, leaving many retail investors with too few shares, tiny fills, or even zero allocation.

SpaceX open interest by volume and venue, May 16 – June 12. Source: Talos

SpaceX-linked tokenized shares on major exchanges collapsed at the last mile, with platforms like Binance, Bybit and Bitget Wallet all canceling their campaigns and issuing refunds after xStocks failed to deliver the underlying allocation.

Alvin Kan, chief operating officer of Bitget Wallet, told Cointelegraph that users subscribed to participate in a tokenized IPO offering facilitated through Kraken’s xStocks, and that the tokens, “if issued,” would represent economic exposure to SpaceX shares.

Related: Bybit to offer tokenized SpaceX IPO access through xStocks

The tokens never came. Kraken was unable to satisfy demand from its own users, let alone serve as a distribution hub for third-party platforms, since the bottleneck was the availability of underlying IPO shares, rather than the onchain plumbing itself.

How exchanges responded when the allocation pipeline broke

Users were left empty-handed as platforms issued notices citing “circumstances outside” their control, causing them to cancel their campaigns and return the subscribed funds.

Binance founder and former chief executive Changpeng Zhao posted the notice on X with the comment, “Protect users when things don’t go as planned,” which triggered a litany of furious replies from retail traders.

Binance customer notice, SpaceX IPO campaign cancelation. Source: Binance

One user stated, “last in the queue, again,” and pointed to the $557 million in crypto capital raised across “three of the world’s biggest exchanges” to buy tokenized SpaceX shares.

“All cancelled. Zero shares delivered… Turns out you still need the underlying asset. Blockchain doesn’t magic shares into existence when Wall Street decides who gets the allocation.”

A Binance Wallet representative told Cointelegraph its role in the campaign was limited to technical and support services. Binance Wallet was not responsible for “pricing, issuance, backing or redemption,” they said, and user-facing materials stated allocation was not guaranteed.

Despite also getting clogged in the xStocks blockage, Bitget, after canceling its pre-market subscriptions and refunding users, responded by switching to Reality, a real-world asset platform backed by the exchange.

Related: Kraken offers SpaceX IPO access through xStocks

Bitget chief executive Gracy Chen told Cointelegraph that Reality provides 1:1 tokenized SpaceX shares (rSPCX) on the spot market, held with a broker, replacing the exchange’s third-party initiative with xStocks.

She said that for users, that means access to “properly backed” US equities, rather than short-term structures chasing a single hot IPO.

The gap between onchain exposure and real allocations

At the heart of the SpaceX mess is a simple structural gap. Crypto venues can create synthetic or tokenized exposure to a stock, but they can’t control the primary market allocations that only underwriters with broker-dealer networks can provide.

Pre-IPO perpetuals gave a strong real-time signal of where traders thought SPCX should trade, but the tokenized IPO campaigns depended on a single upstream allocation pipe that ultimately ran dry.

Sen argued this is exactly why pre-IPO derivatives should be treated as “signals” not substitutes for the IPO machinery itself, and the SpaceX episode reinforces the “need for greater caution around how different forms of pre-IPO exposure are structured, marketed and understood.”

Kan said the episode points to a “broader reality facing the tokenized RWA space,” adding that onchain infrastructure for distribution and settlement is ready, but the mechanisms for crypto-native channels to access primary market allocation are still developing.

Retail demand, he said, is growing faster than the supply-side infrastructure, and closing that gap will require “closer collaboration between crypto platforms, traditional intermediaries and regulators.”

Tokenization can improve access, but it can’t create shares

The legal constraints also help explain why the SpaceX IPO was never going to happen onchain in the first place.

Brogan Law’s Aaron Brogan noted that a token sold to raise $75 billion for SpaceX and marketed on the company’s future performance would fall squarely on the securities side of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) recent token guidance line.

Related: SEC plan to scrap ‘Rule 611’ positive for tokenized US stocks: Galaxy

Between securities law, tax uncertainty and the scrutiny a mega-deal would invite, he argued, “there is no path to do so reliably,” making a full-blown token sale an unrealistic substitute for a traditional IPO for a company of SpaceX’s size.

A spokesperson from the SEC declined to comment on whether the regulator had concerns around crypto platforms’ promotion of IPO access or whether securities regulations adequately address tokenized equity offerings.

Statement on Tokenized Securities. Source: SEC

In a January 2026 staff statement on tokenized securities, however, the SEC stressed that tokenized stocks remain full securities subject to registration and disclosure rules, explicitly distinguishing between custodial, issuer-sponsored tokenization and synthetic or third-party wrappers.

The future of tokenized IPO access

For all the drama around the SpaceX IPO, none of the key players believe it has killed the tokenized equity story, but rather sharpened the conditions under which it can work.

Dinari, a tokenized equities platform whose tokenized $SPCX maintained continuous uptime as the allocation pipe ran dry, chief executive Gabriel Otte told Cointelegraph the long-term opportunity is to “extend the reach of public markets, not reinvent them.”

He said that was achievable by starting with real underlying securities, regulated custody and clear legal rights, then using tokenization to improve access and settlement rather than to sidestep the rules.

Chen, for her part, said the exchange has learned to avoid short-term, third-party structures and instead build 1:1, broker-backed tokens it can stand behind.

For Brogan, the SpaceX IPO exposed the difference between pricing a stock and allocating one. Crypto markets were able to generate liquidity and price discovery ahead of the listing, but access to actual IPO shares remained firmly in the hands of traditional market participants.

Sen concluded that, while investors may be more cautious about products promising exposure to underlying private company shares, the scale of activity surrounding SpaceX shows these markets are “becoming increasingly difficult to ignore.”

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Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always do your own research (DYOR) before making any investment decisions.

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