Coinbase tokenized shares seem to be in free fall on FTX
Investors with tokenized exposure to Coinbase (COIN) shares experienced extreme volatility Tuesday, as the value of their holdings plummeted in a matter of minutes.
The selloff took place on FTX, a leading derivatives exchange, where the COIN-USD stablecoin exchange rate fell from a high above $640 all the way to around $420. Three huge red candles highlighted the selloff, as per a screenshot from Bloomberg podcaster Joe Weisenthal.
Coinbase tokenized shares are crashing on FTX https://t.co/PygqsjSpWQ pic.twitter.com/cl8k5hHEPX
— Joe Weisenthal (@TheStalwart) April 14, 2021
At the time of writing, tokenized Coinbase shares were valued at $445 on FTX. Despite the extreme volatility, the tokenized shares were valued considerably higher than COIN’s reference price of $250 from Nasdaq ahead of the direct listing.
As Cointelegraph recently reported, FTX joined Binance in listing Coinbase stock tokens on Tuesday ahead of COIN’s Nasdaq debut. Described as a “pre-IPO contract,” the FTX listing “tracks Coinbase’s market cap divided by 261,300,000.”
The exchange explained:
“CBSE balances will convert into the equivalent amount of Coinbase Fractional Stock tokens at the end of Coinbase’s first public trading day.”
Tokenized stocks are synthetic versions of real equities. On FTX, tokenized stocks serve as spot tokens that can also be used as collateral for futures trading.
The Coinbase public offering, which has come by way of direct listing as opposed to an IPO, has been described as a “watershed” moment by the cryptocurrency community. The listing gives traditional investors direct exposure to the cryptocurrency market without owning digital assets, which are considered much more volatile than stocks.