Tokenization structuring for RWAs, funds, private credit and on-chain securities models.
- Tokenized real estate (income share / co-ownership / debt).
- Tokenized funds, SPVs and structured products.
- Private credit / revenue-based financing tokens.
- On-chain cap tables and security-like tokens (where permitted).
- Token rights and investor entitlement mapping.
- Security / e-money / utility / derivative risk analysis.
- Distribution constraints (public/private, retail/pro).
- Cross-border marketing and selling restrictions.
- SPV setup + governance and ownership logic.
- Asset holding and cashflow routing mechanics.
- Servicer/manager agreements (if applicable).
- Banking, custody and operational substance planning.
- Offering terms / token terms / subscription logic.
- Risk disclosures and restrictions section.
- Investor representations and suitability baseline.
- Website disclosures for public-facing pages.
- Platform terms (issuer vs platform roles).
- KYC/AML and sanctions logic for investors.
- Payment rails and custody responsibilities.
- Secondary transfer restrictions (where needed).
- Asset title and encumbrance checks baseline.
- Link between token rights and asset/cashflows.
- Servicing and enforcement mechanics (default scenarios).
- Data room structuring and DD support.
- Governance: approvals, roles, reporting cadence.
- Conflicts policy (issuer/platform/manager).
- Investor communications and disclosures workflow.
- Ongoing monitoring and compliance updates.
- What is the asset and who owns it today?
- Who will buy the token (retail/pro/institutions)?
- Where will investors be located and how will you market?
- Will investors have redemption/withdrawal or secondary trading?
Is tokenization always considered a securities offering?
Not always. It depends on token rights, marketing, investor type, transferability, redemption features and jurisdiction. We run a classification analysis to avoid building on the wrong legal assumption.
Can we offer tokens globally?
Usually not as a simple “one size fits all”. Cross-border offerings require distribution restrictions, investor qualification logic, and sometimes licensing. We design a route that matches where you want to sell.
Do we need a regulated platform for token distribution?
Sometimes yes — especially if you handle custody, exchange, brokerage, or public offerings to retail investors. If you operate an issuer-only model with restricted distribution, the route may be different.
What is the biggest failure point in tokenization?
Weak investor-facing documentation and unclear token rights. If rights, risk disclosures and enforcement mechanics are vague, serious investors and partners will avoid the project.
- Tokenized real estate, funds and SPV offerings.
- Private credit / revenue-sharing tokens.
- Platforms onboarding issuers for tokenized assets.
- Projects preparing for institutional distribution.
We focus on investor rights, enforceability and distribution rules — that’s what makes tokenization “real”.