Coinbase’s move into pre-IPO perpetual futures is turning one of the hottest corners of private-market speculation into a crypto-native derivatives product. In a Coinbase announcement, the exchange said eligible non-US traders could access pre-IPO perpetual futures beginning with SpaceX.
The product is important because it sits at the intersection of three markets that usually operate separately: private-company equity demand, offshore-style perpetual futures and stablecoin-settled crypto trading. Instead of waiting for a public listing or buying private shares through restricted channels, traders can speculate on a synthetic price tied to a high-profile pre-IPO company.
That does not make the instrument simple. A pre-IPO perp is not the same as holding stock, and it does not necessarily map perfectly to the price investors will receive in an eventual public listing. It is a market-implied bet on where traders think private-company value should trade.
SpaceX is a natural launch asset for this kind of product because demand for exposure to Elon Musk’s space business has been intense. The company sits at the center of several narratives at once: rockets, satellite internet, defense infrastructure, AI adjacency and public-market scarcity.
For crypto exchanges, that demand creates a chance to expand beyond Bitcoin and Ethereum without leaving the derivatives model they already understand. Perpetual futures are familiar to crypto traders, while private-market exposure gives the product a more mainstream speculative hook.
The risk is price anchoring. Traditional equity markets eventually rely on audited filings, underwriter feedback, investor roadshows and regulated exchange listings. A pre-IPO perp can move on hype, liquidity and positioning long before those anchors fully exist.
The broader signal is that crypto exchanges are trying to become all-purpose speculative markets. Coinbase has already leaned into derivatives, and pre-IPO perps push that strategy further by using crypto infrastructure to package exposure to assets that are not themselves cryptocurrencies.
That can increase engagement, but it also raises questions about investor understanding. Traders need to know that this is a derivative contract, not private equity ownership. The product may track sentiment around a company, but it does not give shareholders’ rights, voting power or ordinary equity economics.
For the crypto market, the story is still worth watching closely. If products like this gain traction, crypto rails could become an increasingly important venue for price discovery around private technology companies. That would pull exchanges deeper into mainstream finance while also inviting more scrutiny from regulators and investors.
That is why the best framing is not that these products democratize private equity in a simple, risk-free way. They create a tradable signal around private-market demand, which can be useful, but that signal can also detach from fundamentals when liquidity is thin or hype is high.
This coverage is based on information from Coinbase.
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.