Private markets returned 2x more than public markets over the last decade.
But 99% of investors can't access them.
Not because they can't afford it. Because the infrastructure doesn't exist.
Until now.
Chunk is a global platform for investing in private companies — real equity
through regulated SPVs, tokenized for immediate liquidity.
No synthetic tokens. No IOUs. No $50K minimums.
Own a chunk of the companies shaping the future. Starting at $100.
Launching soon → https://t.co/QZ7WazqnhQ
#PrivateEquity #Startups #Investing #Fintech #VentureCapital #Crypto
That's why we're building Chunk. A platform where anyone can invest directly in private companies through regulated SPVs. Real equity. No middleman.
Starting at $100.
The future of private investing isn't VC-only or family-office-only. It's open.
https://t.co/DzZYDooz4n
Family offices made 41 direct investments in February.
One Midwest firm led a $230M Series B into an AI chip startup.
No VC. No fund. No middleman.
TechCrunch is calling it a structural shift. VCs are quietly unhappy about it.
But here's what nobody's asking:
If a family office can go direct, why can't everyone else? 👇
#VentureCapital #PrivateEquity #FamilyOffice #Fintech #Crypto
But the same structural shift happening right now — capital going direct, cutting out intermediaries, founders choosing their investors — that shift should work for everyone.
Not just the ultra-wealthy.
Family offices can write $230M checks because they have legal teams, deal flow, and direct access to founders. Regular investors don't have any of that.
The barrier was never intelligence or conviction. Retail investors have been right about SpaceX, Stripe, and Anthropic for years.
The barrier is infrastructure.
Most people have never heard of an SPV.
Every serious investor uses one.
SPV stands for Special Purpose Vehicle. It's a separate legal entity created for one job: hold shares in a single company.
Here's how it works:
500 people want to invest in a private company. Instead of putting 500 names on the cap table, you create one SPV. The SPV pools the capital, buys the shares, and holds them.
Each investor owns a piece of the SPV. The SPV owns the shares. One clean entity on the company's cap table.
This is not new. AngelList has facilitated over $18B through SPVs. Every VC syndicate uses them. Every institutional fund uses them.
Three reasons SPVs matter:
→ Independence. The SPV exists as its own legal entity. If the platform that created it shuts down, your ownership survives. The shares are still there.
→ Simplicity. Companies deal with one shareholder, not hundreds. Clean cap table, clean governance, clean exits.
→ Protection. Your investment is ring-fenced. The SPV's only asset is shares in that one company. No commingling with other deals or platform operations.
Now compare that to platforms that sell you synthetic tokens or revenue-share notes. Those aren't separate entities. They're contracts between you and the platform. If the platform fails, your "investment" is an unsecured claim.
SPVs aren't a feature. They're the foundation.
We're building on that foundation — and making it accessible to everyone.
#PrivateEquity #Crypto #Investing #AlternativeInvestments #Fintech
Two ways to "invest" in SpaceX today:
Option A:
→ Buy a synthetic token from a US platform
→ You own a revenue-share contract, not shares
→ $5,000 investment cap
→ 12-month lockup before you can sell
→ If the platform fails, you're an unsecured creditor
→ US-only
Option B:
→ Invest through a tokenized SPV
→ You own real membership interests backed by actual shares
→ No investment cap
→ Trade on secondary market immediately
→ SPV holds assets independently — platform-proof
→ Available in 150+ countries
Option A exists today. We're building Option B.
#BuildingInPublic #Fintech #PrivateMarkets #Startups #Solana
What most people think they own on equity crowdfunding platforms:
Shares.
What they actually own:
A revenue-share note. A contract that says: "If this company does well, we promise to pay you."
The platform holds the shares. You hold a promise.
If the platform goes bankrupt, your "investment" becomes an unsecured claim. You're behind creditors, landlords, and employees in the payout line.
There's a better structure. It's called an SPV — a separate legal entity that holds the shares independently. If the platform disappears, your ownership doesn't.
It's how every VC fund, every AngelList syndicate, and every institutional investor structures their deals.
The only reason retail investors haven't had access to it is minimums. $25K. $50K. $100K.
We're changing that.
#PrivateEquity #Tokenization #Crowdfunding #Crypto #Fintech