Kraken launches 24/7 tokenized-stock perpetuals for non-U.S.

Kraken launches 24/7 tokenized-stock perpetuals for non-U.S.

Kraken xStocks 24/7 perpetual futures; U.S. users not eligible

As reported by CoinDesk, Kraken has rolled out 24/7 perpetual futures on tokenized U.S. equities under its xStocks lineup, extending crypto-style derivatives to stocks. The company positions the offering as the first regulated tokenized equity perpetuals, with trading available around the clock, including weekends.

According to Kraken’s product information, eligibility excludes U.S. persons, while non-U.S. clients in more than 110 countries can access the contracts. The perps track leading U.S. benchmarks such as the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and major indices, offering long and short exposure without owning the underlying shares.

Pricing, funding, leverage for tokenized stocks perps tracking SPY and indices

As per Business Wire, the xStocks perpetuals provide leveraged access to tokenized representations of major equity indices and certain gold‑backed ETFs, tradable continuously. In standard perpetual futures design, funding payments are typically used to align the contract price with a reference index during off-hours, which can affect holding costs.

Weekend and holiday trading introduces basis risk because underlying cash markets are closed, so material gaps may appear when traditional exchanges open. Liquidity and depth can vary across sessions, and slippage may be more pronounced during off-hours.

Framing the launch in strategic terms, Kraken’s leadership has described tokenization as a way to make market access continuous and geographically broader. “Borderless, always on, and built on crypto rails,” said Arjun Sethi, co-CEO at Kraken.

At the time of this writing, Coinbase Global (COIN) traded at 160.36, up 0.07%, providing a neutral snapshot of listed-crypto equity sentiment, based on data from Yahoo Finance. This market context is informational and unrelated to the availability of xStocks perpetuals to U.S. users.

Regulatory context and risks: SEC, shareholder rights, market-hour gaps

According to Investopedia, the xStocks structure is typically backed by a special-purpose vehicle that holds the referenced securities, while the instruments offered to traders function as derivative or debt‑style exposures that deliver cash value rather than full shareholder rights. As outlined there, redemption in kind may be a future objective but is not assured and should not be presumed.

Policy attention remains focused on investor protections and market integrity, particularly in the United States under Securities and Exchange Commission oversight. Reflecting that stance, “such changes shouldn’t happen outside of formal rulemaking,” said the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA), urging caution on exemptions for tokenized equities.

For traders, the main non-technical risks include jurisdictional restrictions, counterparty exposure to the issuing vehicle, and the possibility that corporate actions, dividends, and pricing remain anchored to legacy market calendars, creating timing mismatches. These factors, together with funding and basis dynamics, can make performance around market-hour transitions notably path dependent.

Disclaimer:

The content on The CCPress is provided for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry inherent risks. Please consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions.
Exit mobile version