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Prime Ledger
Glossary
Reference

Blockchain & Tokenization
Glossary

262+ terms explained in plain language — from blockchain basics to advanced practitioner concepts. Every definition sourced from the Prime Ledger Educational Series.

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A
Accredited Investor

An individual or entity meeting SEC-defined financial thresholds (e.g., $200K+ annual income, $1M+ net worth excluding primary residence, or certain professional certifications) who is eligible to participate in private securities offerings.

Lesson 12
Ad Hoc Investor Committee

An organized creditor group in bankruptcy proceedings that negotiates collectively for token holder interests, typically formed in the first days of a Chapter 11 filing to coordinate claims and influence the reorganization plan.

Lesson 31
Additionality

In carbon markets, the principle that a carbon credit is only valid if the emission reduction would not have happened without the carbon finance incentive. Projects that claim credit for reductions already underway fail this test.

Lesson 11
Adjusted Cost Basis

The original purchase price of tokens, adjusted by capitalized offering costs, pass-through income/loss allocations, and return of capital distributions throughout the holding period. Used to calculate gains or losses at sale.

Lesson 25
Adversarial Attack

Deliberate manipulation of AI compliance systems through techniques such as deepfake identity documents, synthetic voice replication, or poisoned training data designed to bypass automated screening controls.

Lesson 30
AI Monoculture

Systemic risk created when many asset managers use the same underlying AI model for credit assessment or portfolio construction, causing correlated errors and amplifying market-wide mispricing.

Lesson 30
AI-Driven Underwriting

Machine learning models that ingest asset documentation and produce structured credit assessments in minutes rather than weeks, enabling faster deal evaluation for tokenized offerings.

Lesson 30
Allocation Envelope

The total capital an investor designates for tokenized assets, with defined boundaries for eligible asset classes, maximum concentration per offering, and minimum diversification requirements.

Lesson 32
ALM (Asset-Liability Management)

A financial planning system used by insurance companies and pension funds to match the timing and characteristics of investment assets with their future payment obligations to beneficiaries and policyholders.

Lesson 26
AML (Anti-Money Laundering)

The broad framework of policies, procedures, and controls designed to prevent money laundering, terrorist financing, and tax evasion from occurring through financial transactions, including the issuance and trading of security tokens.

Lesson 15
Anchor Investor

A lead institutional investor whose commitment to an offering signals quality and confidence, often negotiated with early-close terms or pricing incentives to secure their participation.

Lesson 26
Atomic Settlement

A settlement mechanism where the exchange of assets and payment happens simultaneously and instantaneously as a single indivisible transaction — either the entire trade completes or nothing happens.

Lesson 3
ATS (Alternative Trading System)

An SEC-regulated trading venue where security tokens can be bought and sold on a secondary market, providing liquidity for asset classes that were previously completely illiquid.

Lesson 7
Automatic Stay

A federal injunction under Section 362 of the Bankruptcy Code that immediately halts all collection actions, lawsuits, and enforcement efforts against a debtor upon filing for bankruptcy protection.

Lesson 31
B
Backup Servicer

A named, contractually committed entity that can assume SPV operations within 30-60 days if the primary servicer defaults or ceases operations.

Lesson 31
Bank Secrecy Act (BSA)

The foundational US federal law requiring financial institutions to assist government agencies in detecting and preventing money laundering. It mandates KYC programs, SAR filing, and recordkeeping for token issuers and exchanges.

Lesson 15
Bankruptcy-Remote SPV

An SPV specifically designed so that no other party's bankruptcy can pull its assets into a bankruptcy proceeding, achieved through separateness covenants, independent directors, and true sale opinions.

Lesson 31
Beneficial Owner (UBO)

The natural person who ultimately owns or controls an entity investor. Under FinCEN rules, any individual owning 25% or more of an entity must be identified during compliance screening for token offerings.

Lesson 15
BitLicense

A license required by the New York Department of Financial Services for any entity conducting virtual currency business activity with New York residents. Effectively a prerequisite for national-scale digital asset businesses.

Lesson 12
Block

A batch of validated transactions that is cryptographically sealed and appended to the blockchain. Each block references the hash of the previous block, creating the tamper-evident chain structure.

Lesson 1
Blockchain

A distributed, append-only digital ledger that records transactions across thousands of computers simultaneously, eliminating the need for a central authority. No single entity controls it, and once data is recorded, it cannot be altered.

Lesson 1
Blocker Corporation

A C-corporation used as an intermediary between a pass-through SPV and tax-exempt investors (like endowments or pension funds) to prevent Unrelated Business Taxable Income from flowing through and impairing the investor's tax-exempt status.

Lesson 26
Blue Carbon

Carbon credits generated from protecting or restoring coastal ecosystems such as mangroves, seagrasses, and salt marshes, which sequester carbon at rates exceeding those of land forests.

Lesson 11
Broker-Dealer

A financial intermediary registered with the SEC and FINRA that facilitates the buying and selling of securities. In tokenized markets, broker-dealers must comply with suitability, supervision, and best execution rules.

Lesson 12
Bug Bounty Program

An incentive program offering financial rewards to independent security researchers who discover and responsibly disclose vulnerabilities in smart contract code before they can be exploited.

Lesson 29
C
C-Corp SPV

A tokenized asset Special Purpose Vehicle structured as a C-Corporation. It creates double taxation but simplifies investor reporting by issuing 1099-DIV forms instead of K-1s.

Lesson 25
Cap Table

A record of all the equity ownership in a company or SPV. In tokenized offerings, the cap table self-updates on-chain every time tokens are transferred, eliminating manual reconciliation.

Lesson 6
Capital Call

A programmatic on-chain notice requiring limited partners to fund their committed but uncalled capital, with smart contracts automating the notice, deadline tracking, and default consequences.

Lesson 28
Carbon Credit

A tradeable certificate representing one metric tonne of CO2 (or equivalent greenhouse gases) either prevented from entering the atmosphere or removed from it. The basic unit of currency in carbon markets.

Lesson 11
Carried Interest (Carry)

The general partner's share of fund profits above the preferred return hurdle rate, typically 20%, encoded in the distribution waterfall smart contract and subject to clawback provisions.

Lesson 28
Cash Reserve

A portion of the tokenized allocation (typically 10%) held in liquid instruments such as stablecoins or money market funds for tax payments, emergency liquidity needs, and opportunistic new investments.

Lesson 32
CFIUS (Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States)

A federal interagency body that reviews foreign investments in US assets for national security concerns, relevant when sovereign wealth funds or foreign investors participate in tokenized offerings.

Lesson 27
CFTC (Commodity Futures Trading Commission)

The US federal agency with jurisdiction over digital assets classified as commodities (notably Bitcoin and Ethereum), as well as futures, swaps, and derivatives markets.

Lesson 12
Chapter 11

US bankruptcy reorganization proceeding allowing a debtor to continue operating while developing a plan to restructure debts, with defined phases including filing, first day motions, plan development, and confirmation.

Lesson 31
Chapter 7

US bankruptcy liquidation proceeding where a court-appointed trustee sells the debtor's non-exempt assets and distributes proceeds to creditors according to the statutory priority of claims.

Lesson 31
Circuit Breaker

An automated smart contract mechanism that pauses operations when oracle data deviates beyond a predefined threshold from prior values, preventing cascading errors from corrupted price feeds.

Lesson 29
Clawback

A contractual obligation requiring the general partner to return over-distributed carried interest if final fund returns fall below the preferred return hurdle rate upon fund liquidation.

Lesson 28
CMS Licence (Capital Markets Services)

A license issued by the Monetary Authority of Singapore required for entities offering, trading, or advising on security tokens under the Securities and Futures Act.

Lesson 27
Co-Investment Rights

An option for limited partners to invest alongside the fund in specific deals at reduced or zero management fees, encodable as token-based options in the LP smart contract.

Lesson 28
Cold Wallet

A digital wallet that stores private keys on a dedicated physical device completely disconnected from the internet, providing maximum security for long-term holdings. Also called a hardware wallet.

Lesson 2
Common Reporting Standard (CRS)

An OECD framework for automatic exchange of financial account information across 100+ jurisdictions, requiring tokenization platforms to report investor holdings to relevant tax authorities.

Lesson 25
Compliance Carbon Market (CCM)

A government-mandated carbon trading system where regulators set emissions caps and require covered entities to hold allowances equal to their emissions, with penalties for non-compliance.

Lesson 11
Composability

The ability of tokenized financial instruments to interact with and build upon each other programmatically — allowing investors to layer exposure and create custom portfolios from interoperable token building blocks.

Lesson 21
Concentration Limit

The maximum percentage of a tokenized portfolio allocated to any single offering (typically 25%) or single issuer/GP (typically 40%), enforced as a risk management discipline.

Lesson 32
Consensus Mechanism

The algorithmic process by which distributed nodes in a blockchain network agree on the current state of the ledger without a central authority. Different blockchains use different mechanisms (Proof of Work, Proof of Stake, etc.).

Lesson 1
Constructive Receipt Doctrine

An IRS principle holding that income is taxable when it is available to the taxpayer, even if not physically received — relevant to smart contract distributions automatically credited to investor wallets.

Lesson 25
Continuous KYC Monitoring

AI-powered systems that flag post-onboarding changes in investor risk profiles, including sanctions list additions, adverse media mentions, and beneficial ownership changes.

Lesson 30
Correlation

The statistical degree to which different tokenized asset classes move together in value; low correlation between holdings is the primary argument for portfolio diversification across asset types.

Lesson 32
Cost Basis

The original value of a tokenized asset for tax purposes, used to calculate capital gains or losses when the token is sold. In tokenized securities, cost basis can be tracked on-chain as an immutable record.

Lesson 25
Counterparty Risk

The risk that the other party in a financial transaction will fail to fulfill their obligations. Smart contracts reduce counterparty risk by replacing trust in a third party with deterministic code execution.

Lesson 3
Covenant Surveillance

AI-powered real-time monitoring of borrower compliance with loan covenants using alternative data feeds such as bank transactions, occupancy sensors, and satellite imagery.

Lesson 30
CRE (Commercial Real Estate)

Income-producing real estate such as office buildings, retail centers, industrial properties, and multifamily housing. At $326 trillion globally, it is the world's largest asset class and a primary target for tokenization.

Lesson 6
Cryptographic Hash

A fixed-length digital fingerprint generated from data using a mathematical function. Any change to the input data produces a completely different hash, making tampering self-evident.

Lesson 1
Custodial Wallet

A digital wallet where a third party holds and manages the private keys on the user's behalf. User-friendly but introduces counterparty risk since the custodian controls access to the assets.

Lesson 2
Custody

The secure storage and safekeeping of assets on behalf of an owner. In tokenized markets, qualified custodians hold digital assets for institutional investors under regulatory requirements.

Lesson 14
D
DAC8

The EU's Directive on Administrative Cooperation for crypto-assets, which establishes automatic reporting of digital asset transactions by service providers to EU tax authorities.

Lesson 25
DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization)

An organization governed by smart contract rules and token-holder voting rather than centralized management. Governance decisions are recorded immutably on-chain.

Lesson 3
Dark Pool

A type of ATS that allows institutional investors to trade large blocks of securities privately, without displaying orders to the public before execution. Used to minimize market impact on large trades.

Lesson 7
Decentralization

The distribution of control and data across thousands of geographically independent nodes rather than a single central authority. A core property of blockchain that eliminates single points of failure.

Lesson 1
Default Provisions

Smart contract logic automatically triggered when a limited partner fails to fund a capital call within the specified deadline, resulting in penalties such as forfeiture, dilution, or forced transfer.

Lesson 28
DeFi (Decentralized Finance)

A broad category of financial services — lending, borrowing, trading, insurance — built on blockchain using smart contracts instead of traditional intermediaries like banks and brokerages.

Lesson 2
Depreciation Recapture

The requirement to reclassify a portion of long-term capital gains from real property sales back to ordinary income (up to 25% under Section 1250), recapturing the tax benefit of depreciation deductions taken during the holding period.

Lesson 25
DFSA (Dubai Financial Services Authority)

The independent regulator for the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC), which established an Investment Token Regime in 2021 for tokenized securities offered to Professional Clients.

Lesson 27
Digital Asset

Any asset that exists in a digital form on a blockchain, including security tokens, utility tokens, cryptocurrency, and tokenized representations of real-world assets.

Lesson 1
Digital Securities Sandbox (DSS)

A UK FCA sandbox launched in 2024 allowing firms to test tokenized securities infrastructure under modified regulatory requirements.

Lesson 27
Digital Wallet

A software application or hardware device that stores the cryptographic keys needed to access and manage digital assets on a blockchain. The wallet holds keys, not assets — the assets always live on the blockchain itself.

Lesson 2
Directed Selling Efforts

Marketing or solicitation activity aimed at US persons that, if conducted during a Regulation S offering, voids the offshore safe harbor exemption.

Lesson 27
Distributed Ledger

A database that is shared, replicated, and synchronized across multiple nodes in a network. Blockchain is a specific type of distributed ledger technology (DLT) where data is organized into cryptographically linked blocks.

Lesson 1
Distribution Compliance Period

A 40-day restricted period under Regulation S during which offshore tokens cannot be transferred to US persons, after which they may trade freely among non-US investors.

Lesson 27
Distribution Waterfall

The encoded priority order for distributing fund proceeds: return of capital first, then preferred return to LPs, GP catch-up, and finally the carried interest split.

Lesson 28
DLT (Distributed Ledger Technology)

The broader category of technology that enables shared, replicated databases across multiple participants. Blockchain is the most well-known form of DLT, but the term encompasses other architectures as well.

Lesson 13
DLT Pilot Regime

An EU regulatory sandbox effective March 2023 that allows licensed operators to trade and settle tokenized securities on distributed ledger technology infrastructure.

Lesson 27
Double Counting

In carbon markets, the practice of counting the same emission reduction toward two different parties' climate commitments, inflating total claimed reductions without additional real-world impact.

Lesson 11
Dry Powder

Uncommitted capital held in reserve within a tokenized portfolio for deploying into compelling new opportunities that arise while existing positions are in lock-up periods.

Lesson 32
Due Diligence

The systematic investigation and evaluation of an investment opportunity before committing capital. For tokenized offerings, this includes legal structure review, compliance verification, asset valuation, technology audit, and team assessment.

Lesson 23
Duration Matching

The practice of structuring investment assets to mature at approximately the same time as anticipated payment obligations, reducing the risk of having to liquidate assets prematurely. Used by pension funds and insurance companies.

Lesson 26
Dynamic Portfolio Rebalancing

AI systems that continuously monitor portfolio drift against target allocations and recommend reinvestment actions within pre-approved parameters.

Lesson 30
E
Emergency Pause

A fast-path smart contract function that freezes all token transfers without the standard timelock delay, reserved for exploit containment and typically requiring multi-signature authorization.

Lesson 29
Endowment

A university or foundation investment fund with a multi-generational time horizon, governed by UPMIFA and typically targeting a 4-5% annual spending rate while preserving purchasing power.

Lesson 26
Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD)

A heightened level of identity verification and ongoing monitoring applied to higher-risk investors, including Politically Exposed Persons. It typically requires verification of the source of funds and closer scrutiny of transaction patterns.

Lesson 15
EOA (Externally Owned Account)

A standard Ethereum wallet controlled by a single private key, representing the simplest governance model where one key holder has complete authority over contract administration.

Lesson 29
ERC-1400

A security token standard on Ethereum designed specifically for regulated financial instruments. It supports transfer restrictions, forced transfers (for legal compliance), and document management needed for securities issuance.

Lesson 6
ERC-20

The most widely used token standard on the Ethereum blockchain, defining a common set of rules that all fungible tokens follow. It enables tokens to be created, transferred, and tracked using a standardized interface.

Lesson 4
ERC-3643

The leading open-source standard for compliant security tokens on Ethereum. It provides a built-in identity registry (on-chain KYC whitelist), transfer restrictions, compliance modules, and auditable compliance history.

Lesson 15
ERISA (Employee Retirement Income Security Act)

US federal law governing private pension plans and retirement accounts, establishing fiduciary standards and requiring qualified custodians for plan assets. Tokenized offerings targeting pension funds must comply with ERISA requirements.

Lesson 26
Escrow

An arrangement where a third party holds assets or funds on behalf of two transacting parties until predefined conditions are met. Smart contracts can replicate escrow functionality without a fiduciary intermediary.

Lesson 3
Estimated Tax Payments

Quarterly tax payments required on pass-through SPV income to avoid IRS underpayment penalties, necessary because K-1 income from tokenized offerings is not subject to withholding.

Lesson 25
Ethereum

A public blockchain platform that supports smart contracts and is the most widely used network for issuing security tokens and building decentralized applications.

Lesson 3
EU AI Act

European Union regulation classifying certain AI applications in credit scoring, AML screening, and investment decisions as high-risk, requiring documentation, human oversight, and algorithmic transparency.

Lesson 30
F
FATCA (Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act)

US legislation requiring foreign financial institutions to report accounts held by US persons to the IRS or face 30% withholding on US-source payments.

Lesson 25
FBAR (FinCEN Form 114)

A report required for US persons holding foreign financial accounts exceeding $10,000 in aggregate value, potentially triggered by tokenized assets held on non-US platforms.

Lesson 25
Feeder Fund

A tokenized vehicle representing beneficial interest in a main fund's LP interest, used by firms like KKR and Hamilton Lane to offer fractional access to institutional-grade fund commitments.

Lesson 28
Fiat Currency

Government-issued currency (such as USD, EUR, GBP) that is not backed by a physical commodity. In tokenized markets, fiat is typically converted to stablecoins for on-chain settlement.

Lesson 10
Fiduciary Duty

A legal obligation to act in the sole interest of a beneficiary or investor, making prudent decisions that a qualified professional would make. Pension funds and endowments have fiduciary duties that create specific structural requirements for tokenized offerings.

Lesson 26
FIFO (First In, First Out)

The default tax accounting method applied when an investor does not elect specific identification, treating the earliest-acquired token lots as the first ones sold.

Lesson 25
FinCEN (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network)

The US Treasury Department bureau responsible for administering anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing compliance for digital asset businesses.

Lesson 12
FINRA (Financial Industry Regulatory Authority)

A self-regulatory organization overseeing broker-dealers in the US. ATS operators and broker-dealers involved in tokenized security transactions must be FINRA members.

Lesson 12
FIRPTA (Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act)

US tax withholding rule requiring 15% withholding on gross proceeds from sale of US real property interests by foreign investors, including interests held through tokenized SPVs.

Lesson 25
Flash Loan Governance Attack

An exploit using borrowed tokens to temporarily gain voting power, pass a malicious governance proposal, and repay the loan within a single blockchain transaction.

Lesson 29
Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act

US law addressing sovereign immunity that affects how sovereign wealth funds structure investments and resolve disputes in tokenized cross-border offerings.

Lesson 27
Form 1099-DA

A new IRS form for digital asset broker reporting of sale proceeds, required from ATS operators and tokenization platforms beginning in the 2025 tax year.

Lesson 25
Form 8938

An IRS form for reporting specified foreign financial assets above $50,000 (single) or $100,000 (married filing jointly) thresholds, applicable to tokenized assets held through foreign platforms.

Lesson 25
Form D

A notice filed with the SEC within 15 days of the first sale in a Regulation D offering, disclosing basic information about the issuer and the offering.

Lesson 12
Formal Verification

A mathematical proof technique that verifies a smart contract satisfies specific invariants, providing the highest level of code correctness assurance.

Lesson 29
Fractional Ownership

The division of a high-value asset into smaller, affordable units (tokens) that each represent a proportional ownership stake. This allows investors to own a piece of a $50M building for as little as $500-$1,000.

Lesson 4
FSMA (Financial Services and Markets Act)

UK legislation governing security tokens as specified investments, establishing the regulatory framework for issuance, trading, and promotion of tokenized securities in the United Kingdom.

Lesson 27
G
GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Principles)

The standard framework for financial reporting in the United States. Institutional investors require GAAP-compliant quarterly and annual financial statements from tokenized offerings.

Lesson 26
Gas Fees

Transaction fees paid to blockchain network validators for processing and confirming transactions. Gas fees fluctuate based on network demand and are a cost consideration for on-chain operations.

Lesson 3
Genesis Block

The very first block in a blockchain, which establishes the initial state of the ledger and contains no reference to a previous block.

Lesson 1
Governance Token

A token that grants holders the right to vote on decisions affecting a project, protocol, or tokenized asset — such as refinancing, management changes, or distribution policy. Votes are recorded immutably on-chain.

Lesson 3
GP Catch-Up

The tier of a fund distribution waterfall where 100% of distributions go to the general partner until their carried interest percentage of total cumulative profits is reached.

Lesson 28
GP Consent Gate

A two-signature transfer approval mechanism requiring general partner countersignature before any secondary market transfer of LP tokens can execute on-chain.

Lesson 28
GP Token

A token encoding the general partner's management fee and carried interest rights in a tokenized fund; typically non-transferable without LP consent and subject to clawback provisions.

Lesson 28
H
Hash

A fixed-length alphanumeric string produced by running data through a cryptographic function. Any change to the input produces a completely different output, making it impossible to reverse-engineer the original data.

Lesson 1
Holding Period

The duration an investor has held tokens, determining whether capital gains are taxed at short-term (12 months or less) or long-term (more than 12 months) rates.

Lesson 25
Hot Wallet

A digital wallet connected to the internet, typically a software application on a phone or computer. Convenient for frequent transactions but carries a larger attack surface than offline alternatives.

Lesson 2
Howey Test

A four-part legal test established by the US Supreme Court in 1946 to determine whether a financial arrangement is a security: (1) investment of money, (2) in a common enterprise, (3) with expectation of profit, (4) from the efforts of others.

Lesson 5
Hybrid Custody

A custody structure allowing both traditional qualified custody and digital asset custody for the same tokenized offering, bridging institutional requirements with blockchain-native operations.

Lesson 26
I
ICO (Initial Coin Offering)

An early fundraising method where projects sold tokens directly to the public, often without regulatory compliance. Many ICOs were later deemed unregistered securities offerings by the SEC.

Lesson 5
Illiquidity

The inability to easily convert an asset into cash without significant delay or loss of value. Traditional private markets like real estate and private equity are highly illiquid, which tokenization aims to solve.

Lesson 4
Immutability

The property of blockchain data that prevents it from being altered, deleted, or backdated after it has been recorded. Any modification attempt would invalidate every subsequent block across every node in the network.

Lesson 1
Independent Director

An SPV board member with fiduciary duty to the SPV rather than the GP, critical for maintaining the bankruptcy remoteness that protects token holders if the GP becomes insolvent.

Lesson 31
Independent Valuation

A third-party asset appraisal required by institutional investors before committing capital to a tokenized offering, providing an arm's-length assessment of fair market value.

Lesson 26
Intellectual Property (IP)

Creations of the mind that can be legally protected, including patents, copyrights, trademarks, and trade secrets. In tokenization, IP rights (such as drug patents or music catalogs) can be represented as security tokens.

Lesson 8
Interoperability

The ability of different blockchain networks, platforms, and systems to communicate and exchange data with each other. Critical for enabling tokens to trade across multiple ATS venues and jurisdictions.

Lesson 21
Investment Company Act

Federal securities law that may be triggered if LP tokens carry governance rights beyond economic participation, potentially requiring the fund to register as an investment company with the SEC.

Lesson 28
Investor Class Gating

A smart contract transfer restriction that limits token ownership based on verified investor classification enforced at the protocol level.

Lesson 27
Invoice Receivable

A business's right to collect payment on an outstanding invoice. Tokenizing receivables allows investors to purchase them at a discount and receive the full amount when the buyer pays.

Lesson 10
IPS (Investment Policy Statement)

A formal document adopted by an institutional investor defining its investment objectives, asset class allocations, risk tolerance, and criteria for evaluating investments. Tokenized offerings must fit within existing IPS categories to attract institutional capital.

Lesson 26
J
Jurisdiction Block List

An on-chain list of blocked countries embedded in the token's transfer logic, preventing transfers to wallets associated with sanctioned or non-target jurisdictions.

Lesson 27
K
K-1 (Schedule K-1)

A tax form issued by pass-through entities (LLCs, partnerships) to each investor, reporting their share of the entity's income, deductions, and credits. Most tokenized SPVs structured as LLCs issue K-1s annually.

Lesson 25
Key Person Provision

A fund governance mechanism that triggers suspension of new investments when named senior partners leave the GP, activating an LP governance vote on whether to continue or wind down.

Lesson 28
KYC (Know Your Customer)

The mandatory process of verifying the identity of every investor before they can purchase or receive a security token. It requires government-issued ID, proof of address, and documentation of ownership structure for entities.

Lesson 15
L
Letter of Credit

A bank-issued guarantee of payment used in international trade, ensuring the seller receives payment once documentary conditions are met. Tokenizing letters of credit creates transparent, fraud-resistant records.

Lesson 10
Liquidity

The ease with which an asset can be bought or sold without significantly affecting its price. Tokenization creates liquidity for historically illiquid assets by enabling secondary market trading on regulated ATS platforms.

Lesson 4
Liquidity Ladder

A portfolio construction technique of staggering tokenized position maturities across multiple time horizons to ensure regular capital recycling without forced liquidation.

Lesson 32
Lock-Up Period

A mandatory holding period during which token holders cannot sell or transfer their tokens. Under Reg D, there is typically a 12-month resale restriction. Smart contracts enforce this automatically.

Lesson 12
Long-Term Capital Gain

Gain on tokens held more than 12 months, taxed at preferential federal rates of 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on income bracket, plus applicable state taxes and NIIT.

Lesson 25
LP Token

A token representing fractional ownership in a fund's limited partner capital pool, carrying economic rights including distributions and capital return but no management authority.

Lesson 28
LPA (Limited Partnership Agreement)

The foundational legal agreement defining all LP and GP rights, operational authority, fee structures, and fund terms that the on-chain smart contract must faithfully encode.

Lesson 28
M
Management Fee

An annual fee (typically 1.5-2%) charged by the GP on committed or invested capital, accruing daily in the fund's smart contract and distributed quarterly to the GP token holder.

Lesson 28
Master Recording

The original sound recording of a song, typically owned by the record label or the artist. Royalties are paid to the master owner for every stream, download, or broadcast of that specific recording.

Lesson 9
Maximum Holder Count

An on-chain cap on unique wallet addresses that can hold a token, enforced to comply with regulatory limits such as the 2,000 holder threshold under SEC registration requirements.

Lesson 27
MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation)

The EU's comprehensive regulatory framework for digital assets, fully effective from December 2024. It creates a unified licensing regime for crypto-asset service providers across all 27 EU member states.

Lesson 13
MiFID II

The EU's Markets in Financial Instruments Directive, which governs security tokens that qualify as financial instruments. It requires prospectus requirements, disclosure obligations, and regulated trading venue access.

Lesson 13
Model Hallucination

The tendency of AI systems to produce confident but factually incorrect outputs that can propagate errors through deal workflows if not caught by human review.

Lesson 30
Money Services Business (MSB)

A FinCEN designation for entities that exchange, transmit, or administer digital assets. MSB classification triggers registration requirements, KYC programs, and Suspicious Activity Report filing obligations.

Lesson 12
Multi-Signature (Multisig)

A governance model requiring M-of-N approvals from authorized signers before administrative smart contract transactions can execute, distributing authority and preventing single points of failure.

Lesson 29
N
NAIC Designation

A credit quality classification assigned by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners that determines whether insurance companies can hold a specific investment and how much capital they must reserve against it.

Lesson 26
NAV (Net Asset Value)

The per-unit value of an investment fund or tokenized offering, calculated as total assets minus total liabilities divided by number of outstanding tokens.

Lesson 26
Net Operating Income (NOI)

A real estate metric representing the income generated by a property after operating expenses but before debt service and taxes. In tokenized CRE, NOI flows through the SPV smart contract to token holders automatically.

Lesson 6
Net Present Value (NPV)

The current value of future cash flows discounted at an appropriate rate. Used to value royalty streams, loan portfolios, and other income-generating assets before tokenization.

Lesson 8
NIIT (Net Investment Income Tax)

A 3.8% federal surtax on net investment income (including capital gains and distributions) for individuals with modified adjusted gross income above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married filing jointly).

Lesson 25
NLP Document Review

Natural language processing tools that cross-reference offering documents for internal consistency, missing disclosures, and regulatory red flags.

Lesson 30
Node

A computer that participates in a blockchain network by maintaining a copy of the ledger and validating transactions. Thousands of geographically distributed nodes create the decentralized architecture.

Lesson 1
Non-Consolidation Opinion

A legal opinion confirming that an SPV's assets and liabilities will not be substantively consolidated with those of its parent or GP in a bankruptcy proceeding.

Lesson 31
Non-Custodial Wallet

A digital wallet where the user maintains sole custody of their private keys with zero counterparty risk — but also zero recourse if the keys or seed phrase are lost.

Lesson 2
O
OCC (Office of the Comptroller of the Currency)

The US federal regulator of national banks that has confirmed banks may provide custody services for digital assets, participate in stablecoin networks, and use blockchain for payment activities.

Lesson 12
OFAC (Office of Foreign Assets Control)

The US Treasury office that administers economic sanctions programs. Every investor and counterparty in a token offering must be screened against OFAC sanctions lists. Violations carry strict liability.

Lesson 15
Offering Circular

A disclosure document required for Regulation A+ offerings, similar to a prospectus but with lighter requirements. It must be reviewed and qualified by the SEC before the offering can launch.

Lesson 12
On-Chain

Refers to data or transactions recorded directly on a blockchain, making them immutable, transparent, and publicly verifiable. On-chain compliance, distributions, and cap table updates are key advantages of tokenized securities.

Lesson 1
Oracle

A service that feeds real-world data (prices, events, measurements) to smart contracts on-chain. Oracles are needed because blockchains cannot natively access off-chain information like property values or royalty payments.

Lesson 11
Order Book

A list of all buy and sell orders for a security on a trading venue, organized by price level. On an ATS, the order book aggregates bids and asks for security tokens, enabling genuine price discovery.

Lesson 7
Ordinary Income

Income from business operations, interest, rents, and most distributions from tokenized assets, taxed at federal rates up to 37% (plus state and NIIT), as opposed to preferentially-taxed capital gains.

Lesson 25
OTC (Over-the-Counter)

Bilateral securities trading conducted directly between two parties without a central exchange or venue. OTC markets have no price transparency and minimal regulatory oversight.

Lesson 7
Overcollateralization

A structuring technique where the value of underlying collateral exceeds the amount of debt secured by it, providing a buffer against losses for senior investors in tokenized offerings.

Lesson 26
P
Pass-Through Entity

A legal structure (typically an LLC or limited partnership) that does not pay entity-level income tax. Instead, income, deductions, and credits flow through to individual investors' tax returns via K-1 forms.

Lesson 25
Pause / Emergency Override

An issuer-controlled smart contract function that freezes all token transfers, typically requiring multi-signature authorization for regulatory compliance or exploit containment.

Lesson 27
Payment Waterfall

The priority order in which cash flows from an asset are distributed to different classes of investors. In structured credit tokenization, smart contracts encode the waterfall logic automatically.

Lesson 10
Pension Fund

A public or corporate retirement fund governed by state law or ERISA with fiduciary obligations to beneficiaries, requiring specific structural accommodations for tokenized investments.

Lesson 26
PEP (Politically Exposed Person)

A current or former government official, head of state, senior military officer, or their immediate family members. PEPs require Enhanced Due Diligence because of elevated corruption and money laundering risk.

Lesson 15
Performance Rights Organization (PRO)

An organization (such as ASCAP, BMI, or SESAC) that collects royalties on behalf of songwriters and publishers for public performances of their music.

Lesson 9
Permissioned Blockchain

A blockchain where participation is restricted to authorized parties. Most institutional tokenized asset platforms use permissioned or hybrid architectures to maintain regulatory compliance.

Lesson 14
Phantom Income

Income allocated to a pass-through SPV investor on their K-1 in excess of cash distributions received, requiring the investor to pay taxes on income they did not receive in cash.

Lesson 25
Placement Agent

An intermediary that introduces institutional investors to tokenized offerings, facilitating capital raising by leveraging established relationships with pension funds, endowments, and insurance companies.

Lesson 26
Platform Independence

Smart contract architecture designed so that any qualified operator can assume servicing and administration if the original tokenization platform ceases operations.

Lesson 31
Portfolio Construction

The systematic approach to assembling multiple tokenized positions considering asset correlation, concentration limits, liquidity laddering, and risk-adjusted return targets.

Lesson 32
PPM (Private Placement Memorandum)

The primary offering document for a Reg D private security token offering. It discloses the investment terms, risk factors, SPV structure, management team, and financial projections.

Lesson 22
Preference / Fraudulent Transfer

Bankruptcy trustee powers to claw back payments made within 90 days (preferences) or two years (fraudulent transfers) before a bankruptcy filing.

Lesson 31
Preferred Return (Hurdle Rate)

The minimum annual return (typically 8%) that limited partners must receive before the general partner participates in any profit sharing or carried interest.

Lesson 28
Price Discovery

The process by which market supply and demand determine the fair market price of an asset. ATS-listed tokens enable genuine price discovery for assets that previously had no transparent pricing mechanism.

Lesson 7
Primary Market

The market where securities are initially issued and sold to investors for the first time. In tokenization, the primary offering is when tokens are created and distributed to initial investors through a compliant offering.

Lesson 7
Priority of Claims

The strict statutory payment order in bankruptcy liquidation: secured creditors first, then administrative claims, priority unsecured, general unsecured, and equity holders last.

Lesson 31
Private Credit

Loans, receivables, trade finance instruments, and structured credit products that exist outside the public bond markets. At over $8 trillion globally, it is one of the largest and fastest-growing asset classes.

Lesson 10
Private Key

A secret cryptographic code that authorizes transaction signing on a blockchain. Anyone who possesses a private key can irrevocably transfer the associated assets. It must never be shared or stored in plaintext.

Lesson 2
Proof of Stake (PoS)

A consensus mechanism where validators are selected to create new blocks based on the amount of cryptocurrency they have "staked" as collateral. More energy-efficient than Proof of Work; used by Ethereum since 2022.

Lesson 1
Proof of Work (PoW)

A consensus mechanism where miners compete to solve complex mathematical puzzles to validate transactions and create new blocks. Used by Bitcoin, it is highly secure but energy-intensive.

Lesson 1
Proxy Contract

An upgradeable smart contract pattern where users interact with a permanent proxy address that delegates calls to a replaceable logic contract, allowing code updates without changing the token address.

Lesson 29
Public Key

A cryptographic address derived from a private key that functions like an account number — shareable freely, it allows others to send assets to you without exposing signing authority.

Lesson 2
Q
Qualified Custodian

A regulated entity (such as a bank, broker-dealer, or trust company) authorized to hold client assets. Institutional investors typically require that tokenized assets be held by a qualified custodian.

Lesson 14
R
Rebalancing

The process of adjusting tokenized portfolio weights back toward target allocations, preferably through directing new capital deployment rather than forced sales of illiquid positions.

Lesson 32
Receivership

A court-appointed neutral third party taking control of a distressed asset pending resolution, commonly used when the underlying asset in a tokenized offering faces operational failure.

Lesson 31
REDD+

Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation — a framework for generating carbon credits by protecting standing forests from deforestation. One of the most popular but also most fraud-prone categories of carbon credits.

Lesson 11
Reentrancy Attack

A smart contract exploit where a malicious contract recursively calls a vulnerable function before the first invocation completes, potentially draining funds by bypassing balance update logic.

Lesson 29
Reg A+ (Regulation A+)

An SEC exemption that allows issuers to raise up to $75M per year from both accredited and non-accredited investors. Often called the "mini-IPO," it requires an SEC-reviewed offering circular.

Lesson 12
Reg CF (Regulation Crowdfunding)

An SEC exemption allowing companies to raise up to $5M per year from the general public through registered crowdfunding portals.

Lesson 12
Reg D (Regulation D)

The most commonly used SEC exemption for private security token offerings. It allows issuers to raise unlimited capital from accredited investors without full SEC registration. Rule 506(c) allows general solicitation with verified accreditation.

Lesson 12
Reg S (Regulation S)

An SEC exemption for offerings made exclusively outside the United States to non-US persons. Critical for global token offerings — it allows issuers to raise capital internationally without triggering US registration requirements.

Lesson 12
Regulation S Safe Harbor

The SEC exemption providing a safe harbor for token offers and sales made outside the United States to non-US persons, subject to distribution compliance periods.

Lesson 27
REIT (Real Estate Investment Trust)

A company that owns, operates, or finances income-producing real estate and distributes at least 90% of taxable income to shareholders as dividends. Tokenized CRE offers similar characteristics but with greater liquidity and lower minimums.

Lesson 6
Renounce Ownership

An irreversible admin action that permanently removes all administrative authority from a smart contract, making it effectively immutable.

Lesson 29
Return of Capital

A distribution to investors that represents a return of their original investment rather than income or profit. It reduces the investor's cost basis rather than creating a current tax liability.

Lesson 25
Risk-Adjusted Return

Expected investment return weighted by the probability of loss scenarios across base case, downside, and severe downside outcomes, used to compare tokenized offerings with different risk profiles.

Lesson 32
Risk-Based Capital (RBC)

An insurance regulatory framework used by the NAIC that assigns capital charges to investments based on risk classification, directly affecting how much capital insurers must reserve against tokenized holdings.

Lesson 26
Royalty Stream

A contractual right to receive ongoing payments based on revenue generated by an underlying asset, such as a drug patent, music catalog, or natural resource. Royalty streams are ideal candidates for tokenization.

Lesson 8
Rule 144

An SEC rule that provides a safe harbor for the resale of restricted and control securities. Under Reg D, there is typically a 12-month holding period under Rule 144 before security tokens can be freely traded.

Lesson 12
S
Safe (Gnosis Safe)

The dominant multi-signature wallet used in institutional tokenized asset deployments, enabling M-of-N approval governance for smart contract administration.

Lesson 29
Santiago Principles

A set of generally accepted principles and practices for sovereign wealth funds regarding governance, accountability, and transparency in their investment operations.

Lesson 26
SAP (Statutory Accounting Principles)

The accounting framework used by US insurance companies for regulatory reporting, distinct from GAAP and requiring specific asset classifications for tokenized holdings.

Lesson 26
SAR (Suspicious Activity Report)

A confidential report filed with FinCEN within 30 days when a financial institution detects suspicious transaction activity. The subject of the report cannot be informed that a SAR has been filed.

Lesson 15
Schedule BA

The NAIC classification for undesignated alternative investments, carrying the highest risk-based capital charge and making it the least favorable category for insurance company tokenized asset holdings.

Lesson 26
Schedule D (NAIC)

The NAIC bond classification for insurance company investments, enabling significantly lower capital charges than Schedule BA for structured tokenized debt offerings.

Lesson 26
SDN List (Specially Designated Nationals)

The OFAC-maintained list of individuals, entities, and countries with whom US persons are prohibited from conducting any transactions. Screening against the SDN list is required before every token issuance and transfer.

Lesson 15
SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission)

The primary US federal regulator for securities markets, including tokenized securities. The SEC oversees token offerings, broker-dealers, investment advisors, and registered trading venues.

Lesson 12
Secondary Market

A market where previously issued securities are traded between investors. ATS platforms create secondary markets for security tokens, providing liquidity that private markets have traditionally lacked.

Lesson 7
Section 1231 Gain

Gains from the sale of real property used in a trade or business and held more than one year, potentially qualifying for long-term capital gains rates in tokenized CRE offerings.

Lesson 25
Security Token

A digital token on a blockchain that represents an investment contract with an expectation of profit — the on-chain equivalent of equity, debt, or a fund interest. Subject to SEC registration or a valid exemption.

Lesson 5
Seed Phrase

A sequence of 12 or 24 words that serves as the master backup for a digital wallet. It can regenerate all private keys. Losing the seed phrase means permanent, irreversible loss of access to all associated assets.

Lesson 2
Separateness Covenants

Operating agreement provisions requiring an SPV to maintain separate books, records, bank accounts, and board decisions from its GP, critical for preserving bankruptcy remoteness.

Lesson 31
Settlement

The final exchange of assets and payment that completes a securities transaction. Traditional settlement takes T+2 days; blockchain-based settlement can achieve T+0 (instant) by executing the transfer atomically on-chain.

Lesson 1
Sharpe Ratio

A measure of risk-adjusted return calculated as excess return per unit of volatility, used to evaluate whether adding tokenized alternative assets improves overall portfolio efficiency.

Lesson 32
Short-Term Capital Gain

Gain on tokens held 12 months or less, taxed at ordinary income rates up to 37% at the federal level, plus applicable state income tax and the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax.

Lesson 25
Side Letter

A bilateral agreement granting specific LP terms such as reduced fees or preferential liquidity that presents a significant operational challenge to encode in on-chain fund structures.

Lesson 28
Signer Succession Plan

A documented procedure for replacing multisig signers in the event of unavailability, death, key compromise, or departure, ensuring continuity of smart contract administration.

Lesson 29
Smart Contract

Deterministic code deployed on a blockchain that automatically executes when predefined conditions are satisfied. In tokenized securities, smart contracts enforce distribution schedules, transfer restrictions, and compliance rules.

Lesson 3
Smart Contract Audit

An independent expert review of smart contract code for vulnerability classes including reentrancy, overflow, access control flaws, and logic errors, performed before deployment.

Lesson 29
Snapshot-Based Voting

A governance mechanism where voting power is determined by token holdings at a prior block height rather than at the time of voting, preventing flash loan manipulation.

Lesson 29
Solvency II

The European Union regulatory framework governing insurance company capital requirements, risk management, and investment regulations.

Lesson 26
Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF)

A government-owned investment vehicle that manages national reserves, commodity revenues, or fiscal surpluses with a multi-generational investment horizon.

Lesson 26
Specific Identification

A tax accounting method allowing investors to designate which specific token lots are being sold, enabling tax-loss harvesting and capital gains optimization strategies.

Lesson 25
Spending Rate

The 4-5% annual distribution rate that endowments maintain from their investment portfolios, requiring tokenized holdings to support regular liquidity without forced liquidation.

Lesson 26
SPV (Special Purpose Vehicle)

A bankruptcy-remote legal entity (typically an LLC) created specifically to hold a tokenized asset. The SPV ring-fences the asset from the issuer's other liabilities. Tokens represent fractional ownership in the SPV.

Lesson 6
Stablecoin

A cryptocurrency designed to maintain a stable value by being pegged to a reference asset, typically the US dollar. Stablecoins like USDC are used for on-chain settlement and distribution payments.

Lesson 14
Subscription Agreement

A legal document signed by an investor to formally commit to purchasing tokens in a private offering. It contains representations about accreditation status, understanding of risks, and agreement to the offering terms.

Lesson 22
Substantive Consolidation

A bankruptcy court doctrine that merges an SPV's assets with the GP's bankrupt estate, effectively eliminating the legal separation that bankruptcy-remote structures are designed to maintain.

Lesson 31
Supply Chain Finance

A financing arrangement where an intermediary pays a supplier immediately (at a discount) on behalf of a corporate buyer, then collects the full amount later. Tokenizing these programs allows global investors to fund supplier networks.

Lesson 10
Sync Licensing

A fee paid to place music in film, television, advertising, video games, or other visual media. Sync deals can generate $10K-$500K+ per placement and create ongoing royalties.

Lesson 9
T
T+0 Settlement

Instantaneous settlement of a securities transaction, where the trade executes and completes in the same moment. Blockchain enables T+0 by settling token transfers on-chain in minutes rather than the traditional T+2.

Lesson 7
Timelock

A mandatory delay period (typically 48 hours to 14 days) between when an administrative smart contract transaction is proposed and when it can execute, providing on-chain notice to stakeholders.

Lesson 29
Token

A digital unit on a blockchain that represents ownership, rights, or access to something. In tokenized securities, each token represents a fractional ownership stake in an underlying real-world asset, encoded with rights and rules via smart contract.

Lesson 4
Token Burn

The permanent removal of tokens from circulation, typically by sending them to an irreversible address. Used when an underlying asset is sold and proceeds are distributed, effectively terminating the offering.

Lesson 3
Token Series

Separate token types (e.g., US Series under Reg D, Offshore Series under Reg S) issued from the same SPV with different compliance modules and transfer restrictions.

Lesson 27
Tokenization

The process of representing ownership of a real-world asset as a digital token on a blockchain. The asset stays where it is; what changes is the ownership layer — from paper deeds to an immutable, programmable ledger.

Lesson 4
Trade Finance

Financial instruments that facilitate international commerce, including letters of credit, documentary collections, and trade guarantees. These instruments ensure payment between buyers and sellers in different countries.

Lesson 10
Training Data Bias

Systematic miscalibration in AI models trained on historical data that does not reflect current market conditions, leading to inaccurate credit assessments for tokenized offerings.

Lesson 30
Tranche

A portion or slice of a structured financial product with a distinct risk/return profile. In tokenized private credit, a senior tranche offers lower yield with first-priority repayment, while a junior tranche absorbs losses first.

Lesson 20
Transfer Agent

A traditional financial intermediary responsible for maintaining the record of securities ownership and processing transfers. In tokenized markets, the smart contract and blockchain replace most transfer agent functions.

Lesson 3
Transparency

A core property of blockchain where every transaction is publicly auditable in real time. Any participant can independently verify ownership, distributions, and compliance without relying on a third-party auditor.

Lesson 1
True Sale Opinion

A legal opinion confirming that assets transferred to an SPV constitute a true sale rather than a secured loan, placing them beyond the reach of the originator's creditors in bankruptcy.

Lesson 31
Trustless

A system where participants can transact with confidence without needing to trust any specific individual or institution, because the rules are enforced by code and mathematics rather than human intermediaries.

Lesson 3
TWAP (Time-Weighted Average Price)

An oracle pricing method that averages asset prices over a defined time window, making price manipulation significantly more expensive than attacking a single spot price reading.

Lesson 29
U
UBTI (Unrelated Business Taxable Income)

Income generated by a tax-exempt entity (such as an endowment or pension fund) from activities unrelated to its exempt purpose or through debt-financed investments. Blocker corporation structures are used to shield institutional investors from UBTI.

Lesson 26
Uniform Prudent Investor Act

A state-level legal standard governing how fiduciaries must make investment decisions for pension funds, requiring diversification and evaluation of risk-return in the context of the total portfolio.

Lesson 26
Unrecaptured Section 1250 Gain

The portion of gain on tokenized real estate sales attributable to prior depreciation deductions, taxed at a maximum federal rate of 25% rather than the standard long-term capital gains rate.

Lesson 25
UPMIFA (Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional Funds Act)

A US model law governing endowment and institutional fund management, establishing standards for prudent investing and annual spending rate policies.

Lesson 26
Utility Token

A digital token that grants access to a specific product, service, or platform — functionally closer to a prepaid credit or software license than a financial instrument. Genuine utility tokens fall outside securities law.

Lesson 5
V
Validator

A network participant that verifies the validity of transactions and proposes new blocks on a Proof of Stake blockchain. Validators stake cryptocurrency as collateral to guarantee honest behavior.

Lesson 1
VARA (Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority)

Dubai's dedicated regulator for virtual asset activities outside the DIFC free zone, establishing licensing requirements for tokenization platforms operating in the emirate.

Lesson 27
Voluntary Carbon Market (VCM)

A market where companies and individuals voluntarily purchase carbon credits to offset their emissions for ESG commitments, net-zero pledges, or sustainability goals.

Lesson 11
W
Wallet Address

A public alphanumeric identifier derived from a public key that functions like an account number for receiving digital assets. It can be shared freely without compromising security.

Lesson 2
Whitelist

An on-chain registry of verified, eligible wallet addresses maintained by a token's smart contract. Only wallets on the whitelist can hold or receive security tokens — the core technical compliance control enforcing KYC/AML at the protocol level.

Lesson 15
Y
Yale Model

An endowment allocation strategy pioneered by David Swensen at the Yale University endowment, emphasizing aggressive allocation to alternative and illiquid assets including tokenized alternatives.

Lesson 26