SpaceX’s IPO exposes the first crack in tokenized stocks

SpaceX priced its IPO at $135 per share on June 11, raised $75 billion in the largest public offering in history, and opened on Nasdaq at $150 Friday morning.

By the time the stock reached $164, retail investors had gained “SpaceX exposure” through actual Nasdaq shares, Backpack Securities’ redeemable token on Solana, xStocks tracker certificates on Kraken and Bybit, Binance Wallet’s subscription campaign, and Hyperliquid’s perpetual futures.

The convergence on a single name reflects a structural ambiguity in how crypto exchanges and tokenization platforms label equity-linked instruments, and the most anticipated IPO in years put that ambiguity under the brightest possible light.

Four products and four different claims

An actual Nasdaq share of SPCX conveys shareholder ownership routed through a traditional broker. Binance Stocks offers whole-share limit orders for SPCX executed through an introducing broker and cleared through Alpaca Securities, meaning real shares and real settlement, subject to Nasdaq’s standard trading rules and halts.

Backpack Securities’ SPCX token on Solana is backed 1:1 by a real SpaceX share purchased and held in custody by Backpack, a regulated US broker-dealer. Eligible holders can redeem those tokens for the underlying equity and transfer shares to any traditional brokerage via ACATS/DTCC rails.

Backpack CEO Armani Ferrante described the goal as making underlying securities “portable across financial systems.”

The Solana launch was timed to coincide with the Nasdaq debut, making it the first time a newly listed equity had a simultaneous on-chain market from day one. This model sits closest to direct share ownership because the redemption pathway runs through regulated brokerage infrastructure.

xStocks tokens are a distinct legal instrument, acting as tracker certificates where bearer debt instruments provide economic exposure to SpaceX’s price without conferring shareholder rights, voting rights, or any legal claim to the underlying shares.

Kraken’s own FAQ states xStocks “do not carry shareholder rights, voting rights, or any legal claim to the underlying company shares.”

Bybit’s product terms state that the collateral backing xStocks “may not always consist of the underlying shares,” with cash or other assets potentially substituted, and Bybit acknowledges it does not independently verify the collateral. Both platforms exclude users from the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia.

Hyperliquid’s SPCX contracts are cash-settled derivatives that transition into equity-linked perpetual futures using the live Nasdaq price as an oracle once the stock lists, a position with no claim on the underlying company.

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Hyperliquid’s SPCX contracts do not represent SpaceX stock and do not become stock once it lists, transitioning into equity-linked perpetual futures using the live Nasdaq price as an oracle.

Product type Article examples What users get Share ownership? Main risk
Actual listed stock Nasdaq SPCX; Binance Stocks via broker rails Real SpaceX shares through traditional settlement Yes IPO volatility, trading halts, broker limits
Redeemable tokenized shares Backpack SPCX on Solana Token backed 1:1 by custodied shares, with redemption path Closest to yes Redemption eligibility, custody, jurisdiction
Tracker certificates xStocks on Kraken, Bybit, Binance Wallet Economic exposure to SpaceX price No Allocation limits, issuer/counterparty risk, collateral uncertainty
Perpetual futures Hyperliquid SPCX Leveraged synthetic price exposure No Premiums, liquidation risk, no redemption anchor

The allocation issue

The friction event that drew the most attention originated in the xStocks infrastructure, not in Backpack’s custody model or Hyperliquid’s derivatives engine.

Binance Wallet’s SPCXx subscription campaign raised $557 million from 27,689 wallet addresses, making it one of the largest tokenized IPO campaigns ever. Bybit launched a parallel subscription through its new IPO Express platform.

Both ran on xStocks, priced tokens at 135 USDC, and carried explicit fine print stating that allocations were not guaranteed. Applicants could receive full, partial, or no tokens, with unallocated USDC automatically refunded.

According to Kraken’s growth team, the xStocks provider received a smaller pre-IPO allocation of SpaceX shares than expected. Demand from users across Kraken, Bybit, Binance, and Bitget far exceeded the available supply.

Platform / model User promise What happened under stress Reader takeaway
Binance Wallet SPCXx campaign Subscription for tokenized SpaceX exposure at 135 USDC $557M from 27,689 addresses; allocations not guaranteed Demand can exceed sourced supply
Bybit IPO Express Parallel xStocks-based subscription Terms allowed delays, adjustments, or cancellation “IPO access” is not the same as guaranteed shares
xStocks provider Supply tokenized tracker exposure Reportedly received smaller allocation than expected Tracker supply depends on issuer sourcing
Users Full, partial, or no allocation Allocated users received 4.2786 SPCX, with refunds for the rest The stress point was allocation, not trading demand
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Each allocated user received 4.2786 SPCX shares, a uniform figure that points to a pro rata cut across a fixed pool.

Binance’s FAQ states the campaign “could be delayed, suspended, or canceled due to market, regulatory, or underwriting factors.” Bybit’s announcement stated that listings “may also be adjusted, delayed, or canceled.”

Users who read “tokenized SpaceX IPO access” as a guarantee of ownership with a partial-fill outcome encountered exactly the ceiling described in the documentation.

The supply of the trackers is bound by what the issuer can source at the offering price. When demand outstrips available shares, allocation gets cut, and users get refunds.

Backpack’s model avoids that ceiling because it purchases shares through its own brokerage infrastructure and issues tokens against custodied equity, so the token count corresponds directly to shares actually held.

What Hyperliquid was actually doing

Hyperliquid’s SPCX contract, launched by Trade.xyz on May 18, generated $33 million in volume in its first 24 hours and peaked above $220 before settling near $203, implying a SpaceX valuation above $2.5 trillion before the company had priced a single share.

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