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Coinbase Offers Infinite Pre-IPO Futures to OpenAI and Anthropic. That’s Better COIN Stock News Than Yours.

Going Public sticker tape concept image by iQoncept via Shutterstock

The gap between digital assets and traditional public company stocks has been narrowing, and recently, that trend has been accelerating.

On Monday, Coinbase (COIN) officially launched pre-IPO futures contracts tied to OpenAI and Anthropic artificial intelligence, following its previous issuance of the same public SpaceX (SPCX) vehicle. This measure allows eligible non-US sellers to obtain transaction price exposure from high-quality, venture-backed private companies before they go public. Ten years ago, this might have been considered a virtual reality. Now, it is very true.

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For Coinbase, this is not just a product launch. It represents the expansion of a profitable, derivative business that can separate income from the trading volume of crypto available in the market.

However, before analyzing charts and setting up COIN trades, traders should understand the unique risks of this new derivative instrument.

What Is the Future of a Pre-IPO?

In traditional finance, standard futures contracts have a fixed expiration date. When that date arrives, the contract must be settled, requiring traders to either close their position or roll it over to the next calendar cycle.

The indefinite future (or “perp,” not to be confused with the slang term for a criminal suspect) removes this obligation entirely. It is a derivative contract that trades continuously without an expiration date, allowing participants to hold a definite view of the direction indefinitely.

To ensure that the price of the contract remains centered on the actual price of the underlying asset, the exchange uses a dynamic mechanism called financial ratio. That is a periodic payment that is exchanged between long and short positions based on the contract price or a discount to fair market value.

When this is applied to trending pre-IPO companies like OpenAI and Anthropic, the path gets complicated. Private companies do not have a transparent, real-time public share count. Therefore, pricing these contracts on a per share basis is not very reliable.

Coinbase overcomes this obstacle by creating contracts that are directly indexed to a price-based index. For example, a contract token price of 1,800 implies a combined market capitalization of $1.8 trillion. Kind of like market money before there was a public market to set that figure. Gains and losses are completely settled on a stablecoin proxy like USDC.

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