Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to the questions serious investors ask.

Direct answers first, then the important qualifications. For full detail, see the Disclosures page.

BTC Capital is a private investment manager developing a multifamily real estate and Bitcoin hybrid fund. It pairs cash-flowing apartment investments with a managed, long-term Bitcoin allocation and intends to tokenize investor limited-partner interests for more efficient administration and potential future liquidity.
It is a single fund designed to hold two complementary assets: income-producing apartment communities that generate rental cash flow, and a strategic, long-term Bitcoin allocation. Investor interests are intended to be represented by compliant digital tokens.
People always need a place to live, so well-located apartment communities tend to produce steady monthly rental income — and that income can grow over time as rents rise. Quality properties may also increase in value. Multifamily real estate has historically been relatively resilient across economic cycles, though it still carries risk, including vacancy, rising costs, and interest-rate changes.
Real estate provides steady, income-producing stability; Bitcoin adds the potential for long-term growth that does not move in lockstep with property markets. Combining them aims to pair dependable cash flow with meaningful upside potential in one fund. Because Bitcoin is volatile, it is treated as a long-term reserve, sized carefully, and not actively traded — and it can still decline sharply in value.
Bitcoin is a digital currency that runs on a global, decentralized computer network rather than being issued by a bank or government. Its supply is capped at 21 million coins, which is one reason many investors treat it as a long-term store of value — sometimes called “digital gold.” Its price can rise or fall significantly over short periods.
Rental income is intended to support fund operations and applicable distributions. A portion of available cash flow may, at the Manager's discretion, be used to acquire additional Bitcoin over time. This is not guaranteed.
Value-add Class B and above multifamily communities in high-growth Texas and Florida markets, acquired on the basis of actual operating performance and a defined business plan.
Yes — a strategic, long-term Bitcoin allocation is central to the strategy. It is intended to be held as a reserve asset rather than actively traded.
Bitcoin is intended to be held in institutional-grade custody with appropriate security controls. Digital-asset custody nonetheless carries operational and cybersecurity risk.
Tokenization means recording ownership as a secure digital entry — a “token” — on a blockchain, instead of only on paper. For this fund, a token would represent your limited-partner interest in the fund itself. It can make recordkeeping and approved transfers more efficient, but on its own it does not let you sell or cash out whenever you want.
It is a limited-partner interest in the fund that is recorded as a compliant digital token. The token represents the fund interest; it remains a regulated security.
A tokenized LP interest represents an interest in the fund, not direct ownership of any individual apartment unit or building.
No. Tokenization improves recordkeeping and administration and may enable future transfer options, but it does not by itself create a market or guarantee the ability to sell. Any secondary options remain subject to regulation, platform availability, and market demand.
Borrowing against an eligible interest is a potential future capability, not a current offering. It would depend on regulation, platform availability, collateral valuation, and loan-to-value limits, and is not guaranteed.
The offering is intended for accredited investors as defined under Regulation D of the Securities Act of 1933, subject to verification and the Manager's acceptance.
Key risks include Bitcoin volatility, real estate risk, leverage, custody and cybersecurity, illiquidity, regulatory and technology risk, valuation, and conflicts of interest. An investment may lose its entire value. See the Risk Management and Disclosures pages.
Investors are intended to receive periodic reporting and any applicable distributions, with offering documents describing the cadence and content of reporting.
Use the inquiry form on the Contact page to request the investor overview. Detailed offering documents are shared with qualified, verified prospective investors.
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