What should private investors watch out for when investing in SpaceX, OpenAI? Breaking down the risks of pre-IPO private placements

TOKEN0,68%

Tokenization of Pre-IPO has sparked a craze in the crypto world, initially through private placement platforms like Republic. Later, more exchanges began offering Pre-IPO services, allowing low-threshold investments in private companies like SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic. These sound very attractive, as if listing guarantees big profits. But the real risks behind the mechanisms are what investors should pay attention to. Chinese KOL Phyrex analyzes the mechanisms, risks, and legal responsibilities of tokenized Pre-IPO investments.

What you buy may just be a promise letter and an intangible valuation, with no corresponding shares behind it.

What is an SPV? Common compliant tools for Pre-IPO

SPV (Special Purpose Vehicle) is a common legal tool in private equity and Pre-IPO investments. In practice, for example, investing in unlisted companies like SpaceX often requires a minimum investment of tens of millions of dollars. Ordinary high-net-worth investors cannot participate directly, so the management company establishes an LLC or LP structured SPV to pool multiple investors’ funds into a single investment, which then holds the target company’s shares in the name of the SPV.

For example, the MSX terms mention a fund structure in cooperation with Republic Ventures, which is essentially a type of SPV.

Professional SPVs are highly compliant and often paired with relevant licenses

The key point is: SPV itself is a highly compliant product. Most professional SPV structures are paired with corresponding licenses or exemptions, such as: US RIA / exempt adviser, EU AIFM framework, Singapore SFA, Hong Kong SFC License No. 9, or CIMA registration in the Cayman Islands. Phyrex points out that genuine SPVs usually need to meet three major regulatory conditions:

Management license and registration requirements

USA: Usually registered as a RIA (Registered Investment Adviser)

Europe: Must obtain AIFM license

Singapore: If structured as a CIS, must be under SFA regulation

Hong Kong: Must hold SFC License No. 9

Cayman: Must register with CIMA

Accredited Investor Thresholds

USA: Annual income ≥ $200,000 or net worth ≥ $1 million (excluding primary residence)

Singapore: Annual income ≥ SGD 300,000 or financial assets ≥ SGD 1 million

Cayman: Minimum investment usually starts at $100,000

Even if the Republic platform does offer small-scale SPV products, they must undergo full KYC/AML procedures and are only available for trading on their official platform.

Fund Custody and Fiat Settlement

Mainstream compliant SPVs still settle in fiat currency, with tokens or stablecoins mostly used only as a means for investor deposits or secondary trading.

What is an SPV “Mirror”?

SPV mirror structures are more complex. Suppose a US SPV holds SpaceX shares, but Chinese investors cannot transfer funds directly due to foreign exchange or regulatory restrictions. They might establish a “mirror SPV” in the Cayman Islands or Hong Kong, linked via a Participation Agreement with the main SPV.

In theory, the underlying assets, profit sharing ratios, and management fees are consistent, but legal rights may differ. Furthermore, some structures do not hold real equity but only derivatives or secondary trading commitments. Investors may only be buying a promise of “future purchase.”

Phyrex believes that MSX’s current product “may not even qualify as a full SPV mirror.”

Phyrex further reminds that these products are essentially “securities.” In the US, the Securities Act Section 17(b) requires disclosure if there is paid promotion; otherwise, it may constitute illegal advertising. In Chinese regulatory documents, “fictitious listings, inducing the public to buy pre-IPO shares,” and “public fundraising” are long-standing risks classified as illegal securities or illegal fundraising.

In the crypto space, “proxy investment scams” are not far behind. When Pre-IPO is tokenized, the risk structure does not disappear; it just becomes harder to understand.

This article: What to watch out for when private investing in SpaceX, OpenAI? Analyzing the risks of Pre-IPO private placements was first published by Chain News ABMedia.

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