TBW - Why SpaceX's IPO is highly anticipated on Hyperliquid
Jeff Sprecher said something quite remarkable this week. The founder and CEO of Intercontinental Exchange, and therefore the head of the NYSE, publicly stated that Hyperliquid was "bigger than NASDAQ" even though it's a platform run by just "11 people." It's probably the most candid statement ever made by a traditional finance executive on the real state of competition with decentralized infrastructure.
It comes just as Hyperliquid takes on its most ambitious test yet: pre-IPO price discovery for SpaceX. On May 17, Trade.xyz launched the SPCX-USDC synthetic perp via the HIP-3 framework.
Opening at $150, peaking above $216 (an implied valuation exceeding $2.5 trillion) with significant volumes in the first 24 hours. SpaceX is targeting a Nasdaq listing around June 12, 2026, at a $1.75–2 trillion valuation. The largest IPO in history.
Why is SpaceX drawing so much interest on Hyperliquid?
It's fairly simple to explain. Retail investors are almost entirely excluded from pre-IPO deals by accreditation rules. Hyperliquid, on the other hand, offers access with no KYC, no waitlist, and with leverage, via synthetic perps. The result: traders looking to gain exposure to SpaceX before June 12 don't really have another liquid option.
There's also a concrete precedent. The perp on semiconductor manufacturer Cerebras (CBRS) closed within 3% of its Nasdaq opening price, whereas traditional platforms showed spreads of around 35%.
That's the kind of performance that builds a reputation. Hyperliquid is now perceived as a more reliable real-time barometer than traditional private markets for this type of asset.
What's the underlying mechanism?
It's HIP-3: developers stake 500,000 HYPE — roughly $23 million — to launch permissionless perps. Trade.xyz and Ventuals did it for Cerebras, then for SpaceX. The volumes generated fuel buybacks and burns on the HYPE token, creating a direct loop between platform activity and holders.
The competitive landscape has also shifted in its favor. Tokenized stocks on PreStocks lost around 35% after Anthropic and OpenAI blocked SPV-based transfers. Hyperliquid's synthetic perps bypass securities rights entirely: today it's the only sustainable channel for gaining exposure to pre-IPO assets without the risk of a regulatory shutdown on that specific point.
The Big Whale’s take
That said, not everything is rosy. The May 28 flash crash on SPACEX-USDH (a roughly 45% drop in 30 minutes caused by a blockchain oracle error) liquidated $1.51 million.
This illustrates two structural weaknesses: liquidity remains thin in these markets, and oracle dependency creates real points of failure. Jeff Sprecher's praise also stands in stark contrast to the earlier calls from ICE and CME for stronger CFTC oversight.
Hyperliquid is no longer really a crypto perps DEX. The platform is repositioning itself as the default venue for any asset that traditional markets cannot or will not list. If SPCX replicates the precision of CBRS, the proof will be delivered at trillion-dollar scale.