

Anthropic PreStocks on Solana sold off sharply after fresh attention turned to Anthropic’s restrictions on unauthorized secondary-market transfers. Market watchers flagged an intraday drop of as much as 45%, with the token’s implied Anthropic valuation falling from about $1.4 trillion to roughly $762 billion during the move.
Live market trackers showed the pressure continuing across major dashboards. CoinGecko listed Anthropic PreStocks down about 35% over 24 hours, while CoinMarketCap showed a decline of roughly 38% and a real token market cap near $8 million. That distinction matters: the large valuation swing refers to the implied value of Anthropic based on the token’s reference price, not a direct loss in Anthropic equity value.
The selloff followed renewed focus on Anthropic’s position that unauthorized stock transfers carry no standing on the company’s records. Anthropic treats stock sales or transfers without explicit board approval as void, and said buyers in unauthorized transactions would not be recognized as stockholders. Moreover, the transfers through SPV structures are also prohibited and void.
That warning cuts directly into the central risk behind tokenized private-company products. PreStocks says its tokens provide economic exposure only and do not grant ownership, voting rights, dividend rights, information rights, or any other legal rights in the referenced company. The tokens also are not issued, endorsed, or affiliated with the companies they reference.
Anthropic PreStocks had become one of the most visible symbols of the tokenized pre-IPO boom. In April, Anthropic’s tokenized shares on Jupiter implied an $850 billion valuation, far above the company’s last official private funding valuation. Later that month, the implied pre-IPO valuation crossed $1 trillion as traders treated the Solana market as a real-time proxy for private AI demand.
The latest drop shows how fragile that pricing can be when legal recognition becomes the main variable. Tokenized pre-IPO products can trade 24/7, route through crypto wallets, and attract global liquidity, but they do not automatically solve transfer restrictions inside private-company bylaws. If the referenced company refuses to recognize a transfer, the token may still trade, but its link to enforceable shareholder rights becomes a much harder question.
The market is now repricing that gap. Anthropic remains one of the most watched private AI firms, and demand for pre-IPO exposure has not disappeared. The problem for ANTHROPIC traders is that the token’s price depends on more than AI hype. It also depends on confidence in backing, redemption paths, legal structure, liquidity, and whether buyers believe the product can survive a company-level refusal to recognize unauthorized transfers.
The immediate damage is visible in the token market, not Anthropic’s cap table. ANTHROPIC can still trade onchain, but the selloff has turned the product from a trillion-dollar AI valuation story into a sharper test of tokenized private-stock risk. Until the market sees clearer legal footing or stronger buyer confidence, the implied valuation will remain vulnerable to every new warning around transfer restrictions and shareholder recognition.
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