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#26
Tier 6 · Advanced Practitioner
Prime Ledger · Advanced Series · #26

Structuring for InstitutionsWhat Pension Funds, Endowments & Insurance Companies Actually Require

The largest capital pools in the world — pension funds, university endowments, insurance companies, and sovereign wealth funds — control over $50 trillion in assets. They want access to tokenized markets. They have very specific requirements for getting there. This lesson explains exactly what those requirements are and how to structure offerings that satisfy them.

Pension Funds
$35T
Global AUM
Endowments
$1.8T
US Alone
Insurance
$35T
Invested Assets
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01 · The Opportunity and the Gap

The Capital Is There. The Access Problem Is Structural.

Pension funds, endowments, insurance companies, and sovereign wealth funds collectively manage more capital than the GDP of every country except the United States and China combined. They are perpetually searching for yield, for diversification, and for access to asset classes that are not perfectly correlated with public markets. Tokenized real estate, private credit, and infrastructure fit that description almost precisely.

And yet institutional capital has been slow to enter tokenized markets — not because of skepticism about the technology, but because of structural gaps between how tokenized offerings are typically designed and what institutional investment policy frameworks actually require. The gap is specific and solvable. Understanding it is the prerequisite to closing it.

"The question institutional investors ask is never 'does this technology work?' It is always 'does this fit within our investment policy statement, our regulatory obligations, our fiduciary duty framework, and our operational infrastructure?' The answer to the first question has been yes for years. The answer to the remaining four is what determines whether they can actually invest."

This lesson profiles four institutional investor types — pension funds, university endowments, insurance companies, and sovereign wealth funds — covering what each requires structurally, legally, and operationally. It then addresses the six most common structural obstacles to institutional participation and how each is resolved.

02 · The Four Institutional Profiles

Who They Are, What They Need, and What They Cannot Accept

Investor Type 1 · Pension Funds

Public and Corporate Pension Funds

Pension funds — public employee retirement systems, corporate defined benefit plans, and Taft-Hartley multiemployer funds — are among the most heavily regulated investors in the world. Their primary obligation is fiduciary: they must act in the sole interest of their beneficiaries, making investment decisions that a prudent expert would make. In the US, public pension funds are governed by state law (often modeled on the Uniform Prudent Investor Act) and by ERISA for corporate plans. Both frameworks require documented justification for every investment decision — which means the documentation package for any tokenized offering targeting pension capital must be extensive, institutional-grade, and defensible in a fiduciary review.

Public pension funds have large allocations to alternatives — typically 15–30% of total assets — and are actively searching for infrastructure, private credit, and real estate exposure with defined income characteristics. The average public pension fund has an unfunded liability that makes predictable cash flow yields critically attractive. The structural challenge is not motivation — it is governance.

Non-Negotiable Requirements
Investment Policy Statement (IPS) approval — tokenized instruments must fit within defined asset class buckets
Investment committee approval — often quarterly, occasionally monthly; timeline must be planned around committee dates
Third-party independent valuation — not issuer-produced
ERISA-qualified custodian (for corporate plans) — most crypto/digital asset custodians not yet qualified
Audited annual financial statements for the SPV
Board of Trustee-level disclosure obligations for public plans
Strong Preferences
Manager track record of at least 3 years in the asset class
Senior tranche or first-lien position — downside protection required for fiduciary comfort
Defined liquidity mechanism — ATS secondary market or redemption schedule
Minimum ticket size aligning with fund scale — typically $1M+
Quarterly reporting in traditional financial format (not just on-chain data)
Named placement agent or existing relationship introduction
Investor Type 2 · University Endowments

University and Foundation Endowments

University endowments — led in scale by Harvard ($50B+), Yale ($40B+), and Princeton ($35B+) but including hundreds of smaller institutions — operate under a governance framework defined by their investment policy and the Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional Funds Act (UPMIFA). The Yale Model pioneered by David Swensen demonstrated that endowments could allocate aggressively to alternatives — private equity, real assets, hedge funds, venture capital — because their long time horizons make illiquidity a manageable risk rather than a constraint.

This makes endowments conceptually the most natural institutional audience for tokenized assets. Endowments already accept illiquidity and already allocate to private credit and real assets. The tokenized version of these assets offers the same exposure with better liquidity mechanics, more transparency, and lower minimum commitments — all characteristics that should appeal. In practice, large endowments move slowly due to investment committee governance; smaller endowments ($100M–$500M) can often move faster and may be the better near-term target.

Non-Negotiable Requirements
Investment committee approval — smaller endowments quarterly, large endowments may require full board vote for new asset categories
UPMIFA compliance — prudence standard applied to every alternative investment decision
Annual spending rate compatibility — endowments distribute 4–5% annually; investments must support this without forced liquidations
Qualified independent valuation — marks required for annual financial reporting
UBTI analysis — unrelated business taxable income on debt-financed real estate can impair tax-exempt status
Strong Preferences
ESG alignment — endowments face increasing pressure from faculty, students, and donors on responsible investment
Long-term income predictability — consistent distributions that model well in 10-year projections
Modest minimums for smaller endowments — $250K–$500K first-ticket entry points open the $100M–$500M AUM segment
Real asset or private credit classification — fits existing IPS alternative allocation buckets without requiring new categories
Real-time NAV data — simplifies mark-to-market reporting for financial statement purposes
Investor Type 3 · Insurance Companies

Life, P&C, and Specialty Insurance Carriers

Insurance companies are the largest single institutional investor category by assets under management — with over $35 trillion in invested assets globally. They invest policyholder premiums to fund future claims, meaning their investment mandate is dominated by two constraints: duration matching (assets must mature when liabilities come due) and credit quality (assets must be sufficiently safe to meet guaranteed obligations to policyholders). Insurance investment decisions are governed by state insurance regulators in the US and by Solvency II in the EU — regulatory frameworks that impose capital charges on different asset categories based on perceived risk.

Insurance companies were the breakthrough institutional investor category in Lesson 20's Bridgepoint credit deal — and for good reason. A well-structured senior tranche of tokenized private credit, at investment-grade equivalent quality with overcollateralization and a defined maturity, fits the insurance investment mandate almost perfectly: predictable income, defined credit exposure, collateralized, and yielding above public investment-grade bonds. The challenge is the regulatory capital treatment and the custodial requirements specific to insurance regulation.

Non-Negotiable Requirements
NAIC designation (US) — the National Association of Insurance Commissioners assigns risk-based capital (RBC) charges to all insurance investments; tokenized instruments need a clear NAIC category assignment
State-approved custodian — insurance regulators require investments to be held at an approved custodian; most current digital asset custodians are not yet on approved lists in all states
Statutory accounting treatment — insurance companies use statutory accounting (SAP) not GAAP; tokenized assets must be accountable under SAP frameworks
Investment policy committee approval — separate from board; typically includes CIO, CFO, and General Counsel sign-off for new instrument categories
Duration characteristics defined — must be modelable in ALM (asset-liability management) system
Strong Preferences
Senior / first-lien only — insurance investment policy rarely permits first-loss or junior positions
Fixed income characteristics — floating rates acceptable but defined maturity strongly preferred
Overcollateralization — Junior tranche absorbing first losses before Senior is required, not just preferred
Monthly or quarterly cash distributions — consistent with ALM modeling requirements
Yield 150–300 bps above comparable-duration public IG bonds — required to justify the additional regulatory capital charge
Investor Type 4 · Sovereign Wealth Funds

Sovereign Wealth and State-Owned Investment Vehicles

Sovereign wealth funds — from the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority ($900B+ AUM) to GIC Singapore ($770B+) to Norway's Government Pension Fund Global ($1.7T) — are state-owned investment vehicles that manage national reserves, commodity revenues, or fiscal surplus. They represent the most sophisticated and patient capital in the world, with multi-generational investment horizons and the governance flexibility to move into new asset classes ahead of other institutional investors.

Several Gulf-region SWFs have been explicit about their interest in tokenized real assets — particularly real estate and infrastructure in their home markets and in the US. The UAE's tokenized real estate regulatory framework (RERA Dubai), Singapore's Project Guardian, and Saudi Arabia's interest in tokenizing Vision 2030 infrastructure assets all signal SWF appetite. What is different about SWF engagement is its scale and its governance complexity: a SWF investment is often a government-to-government relationship as much as an investor-issuer relationship, and understanding that dimension is essential.

Non-Negotiable Requirements
Sovereign immunity considerations — SWF investments may carry privileges under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act that affect SPV structure and dispute resolution
CFIUS analysis (for US assets) — some SWF investments in US real estate or technology-adjacent assets may trigger CFIUS national security review
Internal investment committee (often at ministerial level) — approval timelines can be 12–24 months for new instrument categories
Transparency and audit requirements — many SWFs are subject to public accountability frameworks (Santiago Principles) requiring documented investment processes
Minimum investment sizes — most SWFs cannot efficiently deploy less than $25–50M per position; token structures must accommodate large single investors
Strong Preferences
Co-investment rights — SWFs often want the option to increase their position as an offering scales
Observer board rights — large SWFs often request a non-voting observer seat on the SPV governing body
Alignment with home-country strategic priorities — infrastructure, sustainability, or technology-adjacent assets often prioritized
Reporting in investor's preferred currency and jurisdiction standards
Long lock-up acceptable — SWFs' long time horizons make 5–10 year hold periods unremarkable

What Each Institution Requires — Side by Side

This matrix maps the most common structural offering decisions against what each institutional type requires. Use it when designing an offering that targets one or more of these investor categories.

Structural Element Pension Fund Endowment Insurance Co. Sovereign WF
Minimum ticket size $1M–$10M $250K–$5M $5M–$25M $25M–$100M+
Tranche preference Senior only Senior / mezzanine Senior only Flexible
Independent valuation Required Required Required Required
Audited SPV financials Required annually Required annually Required (SAP) Required (quarterly)
Qualified custodian ERISA-qualified Institutional-grade State-approved International custodian
Lock-up tolerance 1–3 years with ATS exit 1–5 years acceptable Defined maturity required 5–10 years acceptable
Distribution frequency Quarterly minimum Annual acceptable Monthly or quarterly Quarterly preferred
Reporting format Traditional + on-chain Traditional + on-chain SAP statutory format Custom / bilingual
ESG / impact disclosure Increasingly required Often required Optional Strategic alignment
Governance rights Observer rights for large positions Rarely requested None typically requested Observer rights common
Legal jurisdiction preference US / Delaware US / Delaware US state-specific Delaware + English law rider
On-chain data access Welcomed — aids fiduciary documentation Welcomed — aids marks Useful but secondary to statutory reporting Welcomed — transparency priority
Approval timeline 3–9 months 2–6 months 4–12 months 12–24 months
$70T+
Combined AUM of pension funds and insurance companies globally — the largest potential capital source for tokenized markets
12 mo.
Minimum time to plan for when targeting insurance company capital — approval timelines that cannot be compressed
Senior
The tranche position required by pension funds and insurance companies — first-loss protection is non-negotiable, not a preference
NAIC
The US regulatory body whose risk-based capital designation determines whether insurance companies can hold a tokenized instrument at all

04 · The Six Obstacles

What Blocks Institutional Capital — and How Each Is Resolved

Every obstacle below reflects an actual conversation that has occurred between an institutional investor and a tokenized asset issuer. Each has a solution — but the solution requires planning before the offering is structured, not after institutional interest is expressed.

Obstacle 1

"Our custodian can't hold digital assets."

The institution's existing custodian — BNY Mellon, State Street, Northern Trust — may not yet have a fully operational digital asset custody product approved by the relevant regulator. This is not a refusal; it is an infrastructure gap.

Solution

Hybrid custody structures and qualified custodian onboarding

Structure the offering to allow both traditional custody (through the investor's existing custodian holding a beneficial interest in the SPV) and digital custody (direct token custody). Simultaneously, facilitate introductions to qualified digital asset custodians — Anchorage Digital, Fireblocks, BitGo — that are building institutional relationships. The market is moving quickly: BNY Mellon launched digital asset custody in 2022; the gap is closing.

Obstacle 2

"We can't get an NAIC designation for this instrument."

For insurance companies, an investment without an NAIC designation requires a Schedule BA treatment — essentially unclassified alternative investment status — which carries the highest risk-based capital charge. This makes the investment economically unattractive unless the yield compensates sufficiently.

Solution

Structure as a private note or debt instrument — not a "token"

An insurance company's investment in a tokenized senior credit tranche can be structured as a participation in a private credit facility — a form they already invest in regularly — that happens to settle and distribute via smart contract. The token is the settlement mechanism; the legal instrument is a private note with defined credit characteristics. This approach enables NAIC Schedule D (bond) or Schedule BA treatment depending on the underlying, dramatically reducing the capital charge.

Obstacle 3

"This doesn't fit any of our IPS asset class buckets."

An Investment Policy Statement written before tokenization existed may not have a category for "tokenized real estate" or "tokenized private credit." Without an IPS category, the investment requires a policy amendment — which requires board approval and significant lead time.

Solution

Position within existing categories, not as a new asset class

Tokenized real estate is real estate — it should be evaluated as a real assets or private real estate allocation. Tokenized private credit is private credit. Work with the institution's investment team to document how the tokenized offering fits within an existing IPS category using the asset's economic characteristics, not its settlement mechanism. The token is the wrapper; the IPS category should be determined by what's inside.

Obstacle 4

"We need quarterly reporting in traditional financial format."

On-chain reporting — transaction hashes, wallet addresses, block confirmations — is not readable by institutional back-office systems and is not acceptable for financial reporting purposes. The on-chain record must be translated into GAAP-compliant financial statements.

Solution

Parallel reporting infrastructure — on-chain plus traditional

Build quarterly reporting packages in traditional financial statement format alongside the on-chain data. The on-chain record is the authoritative source; the quarterly report translates it into the format institutional back-office systems can ingest. Ideally, the reporting package is generated directly from on-chain data via an automated reconciliation layer — ensuring the two records are always consistent and eliminating manual reconciliation risk.

Obstacle 5

"We have UBTI concerns on the real estate allocation."

Tax-exempt investors — endowments, pension funds — may generate Unrelated Business Taxable Income (UBTI) if the tokenized real estate SPV uses debt financing. UBTI is taxable even for otherwise tax-exempt investors, and significant UBTI exposure can make an otherwise attractive real estate investment economically unattractive or administratively complex.

Solution

Blocker corporation structure for tax-exempt investors

A blocker corporation (a C-Corp that sits between the tax-exempt investor and the pass-through SPV) absorbs the UBTI at the corporate level, paying corporate-level tax, and distributing after-tax dividends to the tax-exempt investor. The investor loses some after-tax return but eliminates the UBTI complexity. For large endowments with significant debt-financed real estate exposure, this structure is standard practice — and should be offered proactively to tax-exempt institutional investors in the offering documents.

Obstacle 6

"Our minimum commitment is $10M — your offering is too small."

Large institutional investors — pension funds with $5B+ in AUM, insurance companies managing $50B+ — have minimum position sizes driven by operational efficiency: the cost of diligencing, onboarding, and monitoring an investment must be justified by the return on the invested capital. A $250K position in a $3.5M offering is not economically rational for a $50B fund.

Solution

Series structures, aggregation vehicles, and right-sizing the offering

Three approaches: (1) Right-size the offering — a $50M offering accommodates $10M positions from 5 institutions; smaller offerings should be targeted at smaller institutional investors with lower minimums. (2) Aggregation vehicles — a fund-of-one structure that pools multiple smaller tokenized offerings into a single investment vehicle that a large institution can hold as one line item. (3) Anchor investor structures — offer the large institution an anchor position with early close rights and favorable terms in exchange for committing before general marketing begins.

An Institutionally Structured Offering — What It Looks Like

Here is how the structural requirements from this lesson would manifest in a single hypothetical offering designed from the outset to attract institutional capital across all four investor types.

Hypothetical — Midwest Industrial Portfolio Tokenization

A $120M Offering Designed for Institutional Capital

A Chicago-based industrial real estate manager tokenizes a 14-property Midwest industrial portfolio valued at $165M. The offering is structured from day one to accommodate pension fund, endowment, insurance, and SWF capital simultaneously.

Tranche architecture: Class A Senior tokens ($84M) — first lien, 148% overcollateralization, quarterly distributions, 3-year term, NAIC Schedule D eligible. Class B Mezzanine tokens ($24M) — second lien, 7.5% yield, 5-year term. Class C Equity tokens ($12M) — promoted carried interest, longer hold, targeted to family offices and accredited individuals only.

Key institutional accommodations: Blocker corporation option offered to all tax-exempt investors at subscription. State-approved custodian partnership with Anchorage Digital available alongside traditional custody option. Quarterly reporting in GAAP format plus on-chain data dashboard. Independent valuation by CBRE at $165M — offering Class A at 51 cents on independent NAV dollar. Two insurance companies anchor Class A with $20M each at close. Endowment feeder vehicle available for tax-exempt investors to hold Class A through a blocker. SWF observer seat offered to any single investor committing $25M+.

$120M
Total Raise
4
Institution Types
3
Tranches
148%
Class A Overcollateralization

06 · Your Checklist

Pre-Offering Institutional Readiness — What to Verify Before You Launch

Structure & Legal
Senior tranche defined with explicit overcollateralization ratio and first-lien documentation
Blocker corporation option documented in offering materials for tax-exempt investors
SPV operating agreement reviewed by counsel for ERISA compliance (if targeting pension capital)
CFIUS analysis completed for US assets with potential SWF investor participation
English law rider available for non-US institutional investors requiring it
Minimum ticket size set at level appropriate to target institution size ($1M–$25M range)
Documentation & Reporting
Independent valuation from CBRE, JLL, or recognized firm — full narrative report in data room
Audited historical financials (2–3 years) — named CPA firm, GAAP-compliant
Quarterly reporting package template produced — demonstrates format before first report is due
NAIC designation analysis completed for any insurance company investors (get external counsel opinion)
UBTI analysis completed for tax-exempt investors — documented opinion from tax counsel
Duration and ALM characteristics documented for insurance investor ALM systems
Custody & Operations
Qualified digital asset custodian partnership identified and disclosed in offering materials
Traditional custody option available for institutions whose custodian lacks digital asset capability
Smart contract audited by recognized third-party security firm — report available in data room
Third-party servicer named and contracted — independent of asset manager
Automated K-1 generation capability confirmed before offering close
Distribution reconciliation between on-chain records and traditional financial statements demonstrated
Investor Relations
Investment committee presentation deck prepared — addresses IPS fit, fiduciary standard, risk/return
Reference investors from prior offerings available — institutions prefer speaking to other institutions
Observer rights structure documented for $25M+ anchor investors
Early-close anchor terms prepared — incentivizes lead institutional investor commitment
Named placement agent relationship in place for pension and insurance distribution (if applicable)
Timeline planning: 12-month runway minimum to close with insurance company anchor investors

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TIERS 1–5 · COMPLETE SERIES
01–05 · Foundations
06–11 · Asset Classes
12–16 · Regulation & Market
17–20 · Use Case Stories
21–24 · Future Vision
TIER 6 · ADVANCED PRACTITIONER
25 · Tokenization and Tax
26 · Structuring for Institutions