Ivan Kan, global investor and entrepreneur at the intersection of capital markets, tokenization and emerging tech. Investor in HackIndia.

In May 2026, tokenized instruments tied to Anthropic and OpenAI dropped significantly. Anthropic PreStocks dropped roughly 38% to around $879. OpenAI PreStocks fell approximately 46% to around $1,080.

Both companies issued formal notices warning that equity transfers conducted without board approval—including via special-purpose vehicles, forward contracts or tokenized instruments—may be void and unrecognized. According to OpenAI’s published warning, such transactions may carry “no economic value” to buyers. Anthropic listed several firms by name, making clear that purported buyers may receive no stockholder rights.

What the price charts didn’t show was the liquidity gap underneath. The PreStocks platform held roughly $333,000 in stablecoins and $18,000 in SOL backing Anthropic exposure while displaying an implied valuation above $1.3 trillion. The companies didn’t create that gap. They simply made it visible.

The crypto press covered this as a token story. I think it’s something much larger.​

The Problem Was Never The Blockchain

PreStocks track the implied value of private companies ahead of a public listing without endorsement from those companies—an attempt to create liquidity for assets that are, by design, illiquid.

The blockchain worked exactly as intended. The problem was that the instruments were built without legal grounding. When two of the most sophisticated private companies in the world say a tokenized product tied to their equity “may be void,” that’s a warning about the difference between a digital receipt and actual ownership. That distinction gets lost in a market that has spent years conflating the two.​

A Structural Problem The PreStocks Story Exposes

The demand that fueled PreStocks is legitimate. Traditional capital markets restrict private equity access through accredited investor rules, transfer restrictions and expensive intermediary layers. Retail investors seeking tokenized exposure to Anthropic or OpenAI are trying to reach an asset class that the existing structure has kept out of reach.

According to the Institute of Business & Finance, BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street collectively managed more than $30 trillion as of February 2026, and these same institutions dominating public markets already have structural advantages that retail investors don’t. The demand wasn’t wrong. The instrument failed to meet it responsibly.​

What Legitimate Tokenization Actually Requires

A token isn’t a right. That sentence should be printed at the top of every white paper in this industry.

A token can represent a right, record it and transfer it across a programmable ledger. However, the right itself has to exist in law, not just in code. The moment a company issues a formal notice that a transfer is void under its corporate bylaws, the token becomes worthless—not because of anything the blockchain did wrong but because the legal foundation was never there.

The word “void” carries more weight than most coverage acknowledged. According to MEXC, crypto lawyer Gabriel Shapiro noted that “void” rather than “voidable” is a critical legal distinction. Voidable means a transaction can be challenged, while void means it never had legal existence.

This lands differently alongside remarks made on stage at Consensus 2026 in Miami. Nick Ducoff, head of institutional growth at the Solana Foundation—the blockchain PreStocks was built on—dismissed investor protection disclosures as a “paternalistic view,” arguing the “best arbiter is obviously voting with your dollars.” Voting with your dollars is meaningless if the instrument has no legal standing. Access without legal grounding is not democratization. It is exposure without protection.

SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce, posting on X on May 21, pushed back on speculation that the agency’s forthcoming innovation exemption would cover synthetic tokenized securities. Peirce stated the framework would “facilitate trading only of digital representations of the same underlying equity security that an investor could purchase in the secondary market today, not synthetics.” PreStocks was precisely the instrument being described. The regulator and the market arrived at the same conclusion through entirely separate paths.

On May 14 (three days after the drop began), the Senate Banking Committee advanced the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act in a 15-9 bipartisan vote. Section 505 explicitly confirms that tokenized securities remain subject to SEC authority, closing the regulatory arbitrage gap PreStocks exploited. The bill still requires a full Senate floor vote, but its timing reflects a decade-long recognition in Washington that the absence of a statutory framework doesn’t stop markets from forming. It just leaves investors without protection.​

The Lesson The Market Needs To Take Seriously

A retail investor who bought Anthropic PreStocks in May 2026 and lost 38% didn’t lose because they were reckless. They lost because the product had no legal standing with the company whose name was on it. That’s a design failure, and it’s an opportunity for builders doing this correctly to demonstrate why compliance is the condition under which tokenization actually works.

As of this writing, neither company has announced formal enforcement action against token holders. Delaware courts have not yet been tested on enforceability. This is a developing situation, and this article represents my analysis of where things stand today.

Tokenized real-world assets crossed $34 billion in on-chain value as of May 2026. The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act is advancing. Peirce has defined what legitimate tokenized equity looks like. The DTCC has scheduled limited production trades for July 2026. The conditions are aligning.

The PreStocks collapse was a structural rejection. Compliance is the first stage of consideration in tokenized equity. The regulatory framework is arriving, and the technology already works. What the market now needs are products built on the right foundation from day one.

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