I saw Coinbase drop a bunch of new features in their app and it stopped me mid-scroll. As the biggest compliant US crypto exchange, they are pushing hard into traditional finance territory with some seriously ambitious stuff. They rolled out Coinbase Advisor, an AI-powered investment tool registered with the SEC, right alongside tokenized versions of US stocks and pre-IPO perpetual contracts that kick off with SpaceX.
This feels like a big step toward making their platform an everything hub for trading. The pre-IPO perps caught my eye first. Eligible users outside the US can now get exposure to private companies like SpaceX through USDC-settled perpetual futures that run 24/7 with no expiry. When the company eventually lists publicly, positions shift automatically. It is a clever way to let people bet on valuations before the big debut.
Then there is the tokenized stock side. Coinbase plans to offer shares backed one-for-one by actual US equities, complete with dividends paid on-chain. That part targets non-US customers for now and has everyone talking.
I keep thinking about how this blurs lines between crypto and traditional markets. On one hand, it opens access for global users who want easier ways to touch hot private names or real equities without traditional brokers. On the other, it raises fresh questions about oversight.
Key elements making waves right now:
- Coinbase Advisor delivers personalized guidance as one of the first SEC-registered AI advisors available in-app.
- Pre-IPO perpetuals started with SpaceX and more are coming in tech, AI, and energy.
- Tokenized US stocks aim for true ownership features like dividends and potential lending.
Yesterday I was chatting with a trading buddy about it.
Dude, Coinbase just added SpaceX pre-IPO perps and AI advice in one update.
Yeah, but what about the SEC angle on those tokenized wrappers?
Exactly, the third-party packaging is still in a gray zone with reviews delayed. Could spark more legal drama if they push too fast.
We both laughed because it shows how innovation keeps racing ahead of clear rules. I am not against the creativity. Giving regular people better tools for diversified exposure makes sense in a connected world. Yet the regulatory tension feels real. The SEC has been slow-walking exemptions for these third-party wrapped securities, and many in finance circles are waiting to see if lawsuits follow.
This move by Coinbase reminds me of past expansions where big players tested boundaries. They seem careful to limit certain products to non-US users where possible, but the AI advisor is already live for eligible Coinbase One members here at home. It can analyze portfolios, suggest tax-loss harvesting, and more, all while staying compliant on paper.
For me, the exciting part is the potential for seamless on-chain and off-chain trading in one place. Imagine holding tokenized stocks that pay dividends automatically while using AI to spot opportunities across crypto and equities. Risks remain though. Smart contract issues, custody questions, and sudden rule changes could shake things up.
I will keep watching how the market reacts and whether more clarity comes from regulators. In the meantime, it is another sign that the walls between traditional finance and crypto are crumbling faster than expected. Staying informed and diversified feels more important than ever.

















