A New Way to Bet on a Secretive Chip Giant
ChangXin Memory Technologies, better known as CXMT, competes with Samsung and SK Hynix. But if you want to buy its stock before it hits a public exchange, you are mostly out of luck.
That is where Trade.xyz comes in. The startup has introduced a new perpetual futures product, hosted on the Hyperliquid blockchain. It lets traders bet on what CXMT's share price will be once the company lists on the Shanghai Stock Exchange. Think of it as a pre-IPO market, but one where you can trade with leverage.
The contract is the fourth pre-IPO product Trade.xyz has created. Trade.xyz had earlier created pre-IPO contracts for SpaceX, Cerebras Systems (an AI chip company), and Quantinuum (a quantum computing firm). But this one is special - it is the first time Trade.xyz has offered a pre-IPO bet on a Chinese stock.
The Numbers Behind the Bet
CXMT priced its Shanghai IPO at 8.66 yuan per share, which works out to about $1.28. The company is offering 6.69 billion shares, equal to 10% of its total shares after the offering. By size, that makes it the second biggest Chinese IPO ever. Only Agricultural Bank of China Ltd.'s listing was larger.
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Shortly after the futures contract launched, traders pushed the price as high as the equivalent of an implied valuation of roughly $500 billion for CXMT. That is a massive number for a company that has not even started trading yet. The contract itself traded in a range of $6 to $8.64 from its first listing to 2 p.m. Singapore time on the same day.
For context, that $500 billion valuation would put CXMT in the same neighborhood as some of the world's largest chip companies. But how reliable is that number? Pre-IPO contracts like this one often have low trading volume.
A few big trades can swing the price wildly. The real test comes when CXMT actually begins trading on the Shanghai exchange.
The decentralized nature of the Hyperliquid blockchain means these futures contracts operate outside traditional financial gatekeepers, giving traders worldwide a chance to speculate on a company that would otherwise be inaccessible. However, these bets carry extra risk due to low liquidity and limited regulation - the contract's price may not match the eventual IPO price closely.
Why This Matters for Your Portfolio
The biggest reason this contract exists is access. CXMT's Shanghai stock offering is mostly accessible only to domestic Chinese investors, and foreign buyers face significant hurdles in purchasing shares directly. So if you want a piece of a Chinese chipmaker before the rest of the world can buy in, this blockchain-based contract is one of the few options available.
The catch: These contracts come with serious risks. Prices can differ sharply from the eventual stock price. Low volume means you might not be able to sell when you want. And because the contract uses leverage, you could lose your entire bet before CXMT even starts trading.
Still, the contract serves as an early signal. It shows how traders around the world are sizing up CXMT's value before the official IPO. For investors, that is useful information even if they never touch the contract itself. It gives a peek into how the market is pricing one of China's most important private tech companies.
What happens next? CXMT's actual Shanghai trading debut will be the real test. If the stock opens near the $6 to $8.64 range the futures contract has been showing, the pre-IPO market will have done its job. If it opens much lower or higher, that gap will be a lesson in how different betting on a stock can be from owning it.
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