Bybit has announced it is following Kraken in offering users access to tokenized SpaceX IPO exposure via the xStocks framework. xStocks is the tokenized equities infrastructure platform that Kraken's parent company, Payward, acquired when it purchased Backed Finance in late 2025. In plain terms, users can now buy an on-chain token representing SpaceX equity exposure directly on a crypto exchange—no traditional broker, no accredited investor qualification required.
SpaceX has not yet formally gone public, but the tokenized format allows retail participants to engage in IPO-price speculation ahead of any official listing. This represents the latest large-scale test of the RWA sector's push into equity tokenization.
The logic behind xStocks is straightforward: traditional equity markets still carry high barriers to entry for retail investors, especially for pre-IPO or IPO allocations in unlisted tech companies. Backed Finance's original model involved issuing on-chain tokens pegged to underlying assets through a licensed structure. After Kraken's acquisition, this framework was rebranded under xStocks.
For exchanges, tokenized equities are a critical tool for maintaining user engagement during bear markets or periods of regulatory tightening—they allow crypto platforms to offer traditional financial products while circumventing (or routing around) traditional brokerage regulatory pathways. Bybit's entry signals that this space is evolving from a Kraken exclusive into a standard competitive feature across the industry.
The appeal of these products is obvious: low entry barriers, on-chain composability, 24/7 trading. But before you decide, you need to understand several hidden dimensions:
1. Legal Ambiguity Creates Tax Uncertainty Tokenized equities are not clearly classified as "stocks" or "derivatives" in most jurisdictions—they fall into a gray zone. In Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore, for example, there are currently no unified guidelines on how to report disposal gains from such assets. This means the tax reporting obligations triggered when you sell may be far more complex than you expect.
2. What Rights Does the Token Actually Represent? Do tokens issued under the xStocks framework carry real shareholder voting rights? Dividend entitlements? Or are they simply price-tracking contracts? The answer varies depending on the issuance structure. You must read the full legal offering document—not just the "tokenized SpaceX" headline—before making any decision.
3. Cross-Border Holding and Reporting Obligations If you are an onshore resident (e.g., mainland China, Taiwan) holding such tokens via an offshore exchange, you may simultaneously trigger foreign exchange controls and overseas asset reporting obligations—and these may be treated differently from holdings in pure crypto assets.
Step 1: Confirm Your Tax Residency and Local Rules Before purchasing any tokenized equity, determine how your tax jurisdiction classifies this type of asset—capital gain, financial derivatives income, or other income. The classification determines your applicable tax rate and reporting timeline, and the differences are significant.
Step 2: Obtain and Read the xStocks Legal Offering Document Tokens issued under the Kraken/Backed Finance structure typically carry an ISIN number and a legal prospectus. This is the only reliable basis for understanding the underlying rights structure. Do not rely on marketing copy displayed on the exchange interface.
Step 3: Record Every Transaction's Timestamp and Cost Basis The method for calculating cost basis on tokenized equities (FIFO, LIFO, average cost) differs by jurisdiction. Building a complete record from your very first transaction is the lowest-cost way to prepare for future reporting.
Step 4: Assess Overseas Asset Reporting Thresholds For U.S. persons, offshore financial accounts with a maximum annual balance exceeding $10,000 require FBAR filing. For Taiwan residents, overseas income exceeding NTD 1 million must be included in the Alternative Minimum Tax calculation. These thresholds are tied to how much you hold, not how much you earn.
The narrative around tokenized SpaceX is undeniably compelling, but the vast majority of buyers never stop to think about which line on their tax return this token belongs to. Bybit and Kraken provide the entry ramp—they have no obligation to tell you what compliance costs await at the exit. Compliance is not a reason to dismiss these products, but ignoring it is the real script for making money in a bull market and losing it to the tax authority.