Bybit, the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency exchange by trading volume, has launched IPO Express — a new platform that allows eligible retail investors to subscribe to tokenized representations of IPO shares at the offering price. The inaugural offering is SpaceX, trading under the token ticker SPCX, with subscriptions open June 7 to June 11, 2026 and spot trading scheduled to begin June 12.
The launch arrives at a critical moment for SpaceX’s $75 billion IPO. As TCT previously reported, lead underwriters Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley have instructed syndicate banks not to accept orders from investors in mainland China and Hong Kong, citing US International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR). With SpaceX’s IPO attracting approximately $150 billion in investor demand against a $75 billion raise—nearly 2x oversubscribed—access to the offering has become a contested resource.
Bybit IPO Express is, on paper, a direct backdoor. But the structural details matter enormously, and they reveal a product that is more carefully bounded than the marketing framing suggests.
What Bybit Is Actually Offering
The mechanics are clean. Eligible Bybit users register and submit subscription requests through IPO Express between June 7 and June 11. Allocations are distributed pro-rata between June 11 and June 12, with unused funds refunded automatically. Tokenized SpaceX shares (SPCX) become available for trading on Bybit Spot on June 12.
Bybit’s product is powered by Payward Services’ xStocks platform. Payward is the parent company of cryptocurrency exchange Kraken, which has separately opened SpaceX IPO access via xStocks to retail clients in over 110 countries. The underlying tokenization framework is regulated, blockchain-agnostic, and built for on-chain interoperability. Each tokenized IPO share is backed 1:1 by real equity held in regulated broker-dealer custody.
The framework distinguishes Bybit’s offering from the synthetic pre-IPO perpetual futures markets on Hyperliquid and Binance. Where Hyperliquid’s SPCX perps and Binance’s pre-IPO derivatives are oracle-priced synthetic contracts with no underlying share ownership, Bybit’s SPCX tokens are backed by actual SpaceX equity in custody. That distinction is the basis of Bybit’s positioning as the more direct access path.
But the T&Cs published on Bybit’s IPO Express page reveal that “direct” carries several important asterisks.
The Critical Caveat: xStocks Are Not Shares
Buried in clause 2 of Bybit’s terms is the most important sentence in the entire offering:
“xStocks do not confer shareholder voting rights or dividend rights in the underlying issuer. xStocks holders have no direct legal or beneficial ownership interest in the shares or equity of the underlying issuer and hold no claim against the underlying issuer. xStocks represent a tokenized exposure to the economic performance of the underlying reference asset only.”
This is a structural reality that mirrors the position Binance disclosed for its bStocks product, where bStocks are classified as certificates representing financial instruments under FSMR rather than as actual equity. SPCX holders on Bybit will have economic exposure to SpaceX’s share price post-IPO. They will not be SpaceX shareholders of record. They will not receive voting rights. They will not have direct dividend claims against SpaceX itself. They will not have legal standing against SpaceX in events like bankruptcy or corporate restructuring.
The economic equivalence may be sufficient for most retail investors who want price exposure. But for sophisticated investors evaluating the product against direct equity ownership or against synthetic derivatives, the distinction matters.
The EEA Exclusion
The second significant detail in Bybit’s terms is the explicit exclusion of European Economic Area users from the offering. Clause 9 of the terms is explicit:
“This event is not intended for users residing in the European Economic Area (EEA), which includes Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway. Participation by any person residing in, located in, or having a registered address in the EEA is strictly prohibited.”
The reason: “Bybit does not hold any license, registration, or authorization under MiCA or any applicable EEA financial services regulatory regime in respect of this event.”
This is a meaningful gap. The European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) provides a comprehensive framework for crypto-related financial services across the EEA, but tokenized equity offerings fall into a regulatory zone that intersects with traditional securities law. Bybit has chosen not to obtain authorization for this specific product, which means roughly 450 million potential users across the EU plus Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway are entirely excluded.
For TCT readers in the EEA, the practical implication is direct: Bybit IPO Express is not available, and the same SpaceX IPO that excluded Chinese and Hong Kong investors via ITAR now also excludes European investors via MiCA absence. The structural gap created by SpaceX’s IPO restrictions has been replicated, in a different form, by the access path that was supposed to address it.
Kraken’s xStocks-based offering to “over 110 countries” likely covers many of the same EEA jurisdictions Bybit excludes, given Kraken’s separate regulatory positioning in Europe. But that’s a Kraken question, not a Bybit one.
VIP-Only Eligibility
The third notable restriction is in clause 3. IPO Express is only available to Bybit users who have attained “VIP or PRO tier status” on the platform, in addition to completing Identity Verification Level 1 or Business Verification. Bybit’s VIP and PRO tiers are typically reached through trading volume thresholds, asset holdings, or membership in institutional programs.
The eligibility restriction has two effects. It narrows the addressable user base from Bybit’s reported 60+ million users to a meaningfully smaller pool of higher-volume traders. And it positions IPO Express as a feature for engaged, repeat Bybit customers rather than a mass-market retail offering. The combined effect is that the “retail access” framing applies more to “non-institutional sophisticated retail” than to genuine first-time investors.
The pro-rata allocation mechanism further compounds the dynamic. With SpaceX’s IPO already at $150 billion in demand against $75 billion supply, even VIP-tier Bybit users may receive fractional allocations relative to their subscription requests. The structure is designed to absorb extreme oversubscription, not to guarantee meaningful position sizes.
Other Notable Terms
A few additional details from the T&Cs are worth flagging:
Funds are frozen during subscription (clause 4). Once a valid subscription order is submitted, the corresponding funds are locked in the user’s account until either allocation results are announced or the event is cancelled. Cancellation refunds occur within 5 business days. The freeze creates an opportunity cost that users should factor into participation decisions.
The 20% price tolerance clause (clause 6). If the final IPO price is no more than 20% above the indicative subscription price, Bybit automatically subscribes the user’s allocation at the final price without further confirmation. If the final price exceeds 20% above indicative, users must reconfirm within a specified timeframe, or the order is cancelled. The clause is unusual — most retail subscription platforms do not auto-execute pricing changes — and represents a meaningful pre-authorization users should understand before subscribing.
Singapore law and arbitration (clause 14). The terms are governed by the laws of the Republic of Singapore, with disputes resolved through the Singapore International Arbitration Centre. For users outside Singapore, dispute resolution may require navigating an unfamiliar legal jurisdiction.
Why It Still Matters
Despite the restrictions, Bybit’s IPO Express represents a genuinely new product structure in crypto-native finance. Three points of significance stand out.
First, the offering price access. Most retail investors globally have historically been excluded from primary market participation in major IPOs — they get to buy on day one of secondary trading, typically at significant premiums to the offering price. Bybit’s product gives eligible users access at the IPO offering price for the first time at this scale. For an IPO with $150 billion in demand, that distinction is economically meaningful.
Second, the global non-EEA reach. While EEA users are excluded, Bybit operates across most of Asia, the Middle East, Latin America, and parts of Africa. The combined potential user base in those regions — particularly across Southeast Asia, where Bybit has significant market share — is substantial. Investors in jurisdictions where traditional brokerage access to U.S. IPOs is difficult, expensive, or impossible now have a structural alternative.
Third, the precedent. Bybit’s launch confirms the broader 2026 pattern that TCT has been tracking — every major centralized crypto exchange is racing to build tokenized equity and IPO access products. Binance offers bStocks. Robinhood and Kraken have parallel tokenized equity products. Bitget operates Reality Platform. Bybit’s addition of IPO Express, with offering-price access, raises the competitive baseline. The next major mega-IPOs — OpenAI, Anthropic, and others rumored to follow SpaceX — are likely to see similar tokenized access products built around them.
What Comes Next
The most important near-term signal is allocation. SpaceX’s $150 billion in demand against $75 billion in supply means primary market allocations will be highly competitive. How much of the offering Bybit and Kraken (via xStocks) collectively receive will indicate whether the institutional underwriting syndicate views crypto-native distribution as a legitimate channel or as a marginal courtesy.
If Bybit IPO Express users receive substantive allocations relative to subscription, the product is materially significant for the global investor base it serves. If they receive token allocations because traditional institutional investors dominate the order book, the framing becomes more about retail access symbolism than meaningful equity exposure.
The secondary signal is what comes after SpaceX. Bybit’s announcement positions IPO Express as a recurring product — “starting with SpaceX” — meaning the platform is intended to offer access to subsequent major IPOs as they emerge. If OpenAI, Anthropic, or other high-profile private companies pursue public listings in 2026 or 2027, similar tokenized access products through Bybit, Kraken, and xStocks-based competitors will likely follow.
For now, eligible non-EEA Bybit users with VIP or PRO tier status have until June 11 to submit subscriptions. Spot trading on SPCX begins June 12. Whether the structure represents the future of retail IPO access or a constrained niche product will be visible in subscription volume, allocation distribution, and post-listing price behavior in the days that follow.
Also Read: Coinbase Lists SpaceX Pre-IPO Perpetuals After SPCX Sets $135 Price