Because there is no real-time public stock price to pull from, the contracts are designed to reflect what Binance calls "publicly available IPO pricing indicators" . This is a polite way of saying the pricing is synthetic and driven by signals such as:
OKX, which launched its own competitive Pre-IPO perpetuals for SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic on May 7, was more specific in its announcement, pricing its contracts at "one billionth of the company's market cap" and setting a leverage range of 0.01 to 5x with a 0% daily funding rate . Binance's official documentation for SPCXUSDT includes an up to 5x leverage limit, placing it in a similar high-risk band
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A crucial risk: there is no guarantee a company will ever go public, at what valuation, or on what timeline. A contract can remain open based on pure conjecture, and the gap between synthetic expectations and an eventual real-world price could be catastrophic for leveraged traders.
The parallel listing of high-profile names isn't a coincidence. It's a land grab. The timeline tells the story:
For both exchanges, the appeal is clear. Pre-IPO trading has historically been one of the most gated and profitable corners of finance, reserved for venture funds, late-stage private placement investors, and accredited investors on secondary platforms. By creating synthetic exposure, crypto exchanges are offering their massive global retail user base a ticket to the game — albeit a ticket with no actual seat at the shareholder table. As Binance stated in its launch announcement, the goal is to let users "take positions on shares before they begin trading on public exchanges" .
The product's boldness is matched by its legal ambiguity. These contracts reference instruments (private equity) that are unambiguously securities in most major jurisdictions, yet they execute, clear, and settle on a crypto derivatives infrastructure that often exists in a separate regulatory silo.
Binance Futures lists the contracts on Binance RIE and clears them through Binance RCH . The pre-IPO perpetuals are available only to eligible users, which typically means non-U.S. persons, given Binance's ongoing geographic restrictions. But the synthetic nature of the product does not automatically erase the fact that it derives its value from a security not yet approved for public trading.
No major regulator from the U.S. SEC, European ESMA, or other authorities had issued guidance on these specific instruments at the time of launch. This creates a situation where the product's legal durability is untested and varies wildly by jurisdiction — a reality any trader should factor into their risk model.
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