Trade Estate is a real‑estate developer, not a tokenization platform. The fund is the vehicle through which we share that developer's work with outside investors. This piece is a short, plain‑English walkthrough of how the structure actually works.
One fund, many projects
When you subscribe to Trade Estate, you subscribe to one fund, not to a per‑project SPV. The fund owns its assets directly and uses the same balance sheet to finance every project we develop. New projects enter the fund's pipeline; capital events flow back to the fund; distributions go pro‑rata to all fund participants.
This is deliberate. A per‑project SPV model creates an investor base that has to re‑underwrite every offering. The fund model means we underwrite once, the developer, and then the developer's pipeline becomes the investor's pipeline.
We underwrite once, the developer, and then the developer's pipeline becomes the investor's pipeline.
Where the capital goes
Subscribed capital is held at the fund level until it is deployed into a specific project. Deployment requires an investment committee memo, signed approvals, and a clear use‑of‑funds schedule. Investors see deployment events in their platform dashboard.
- Land acquisition and pre‑construction soft costs
- Hard‑construction milestone payments to general contractors
- Lease‑up, fit‑out, and stabilized‑operations bridge
- Reserve for unforeseen events and contingency
How returns reach the investor
There are two return streams. Rental income from leased projects flows to fund participants according to the fund's documented distribution schedule. Capital events, refinance, partial sale, full exit, flow as principal returns. Both are recorded on the platform and itemized in the investor letters.
Tokenized fund units (RWA infrastructure) are planned for 2026. They will not change the underlying fund terms or how returns are calculated. They will, when live, give secondary‑market access through compliant ATS venues, but that is a liquidity feature, not a business model change.