DISi

Capital Stack

Institutional-grade capital architecture.

DISi's capital stack is structured to support SBLC-collateralized credit, yield on idle reserves, secondary market readiness, and banking-channel distribution.

SBLC CollateralTreasury YieldSecondary Ready

Reserve Allocation

50%

Of proceeds → silver vault

Liquidity Reserve

20%

Of proceeds retained

SBLC Path

Available

Post-reserve documentation

Secondary Readiness

Phase 2

Post-close reporting cycle

SBLC Structure

Standby Letter of Credit as reserve collateral path.

The DISi reserve—once funded and documented—creates a collateralization basis for Standby Letters of Credit (SBLCs). This unlocks institutional credit channels without diluting the silver reserve position.

  • Reserve documentation required

    SBLC issuance path opens after 43-101 report and initial reserve attestation are complete.

  • Non-dilutive credit

    SBLC borrowing against the reserve does not require selling silver or diluting token holders.

  • Banking channel integration

    SBLC instruments integrate with the board's existing banking relationships for institutional distribution.

  • Bridge liquidity bridge

    Between token issuance and secondary market activation, SBLC provides liquidity bridge for large redemption events.

SBLC Readiness Checklist

Board approval of reserve collateralization policy

Reserve Foundation entity established

43-101 geological reserve report

Initial vault funding at minimum close

Banking partner SBLC facility term sheet

Investor disclosure update (material change)

Treasury Yield

Idle reserve capital earns yield while maintaining silver position.

T-Bill allocation

U.S. Treasury bills via custodian bank account. Risk-free yield on cash held pending silver vault deployment.

Money market sweep

Overnight sweep of subscription escrow cash into government money market funds during the offering period.

Post-close distribution

Yield on reserve cash position disclosed in quarterly investor reports. Board determines distribution vs. reinvestment policy.

Secondary Market Readiness

Post-close secondary liquidity pathway.

DISi tokens are restricted securities at issuance. The secondary readiness pathway activates through a structured sequence: compliance holdout period, ATS registration pathway, and market-maker introduction.

Phase 1 (0–12 mo)

Lock-up period. Transfer restrictions fully enforced. No secondary market.

Phase 2 (12–24 mo)

ATS registration pathway opens. Board approves secondary market strategy. Market maker engagement begins.

Phase 3 (24+ mo)

Secondary trading on compliant alternative trading system. Full compliance-gated wallet-to-wallet transfers.

Banking Channel Distribution

Board members bring existing banking and capital markets relationships. DISi tokens can be distributed through registered broker-dealers under Reg D 506(c) using general solicitation.

  • Registered broker-dealer distribution agreements
  • Accredited investor verification via third-party services (Verify Investor, etc.)
  • FINRA-compliant marketing materials
  • Investment advisory channel partnerships
  • Family office and UHNW private placement relationships

Securities Disclaimer

Nothing on this page or website constitutes an offer to sell or a solicitation to buy any security. Any securities offering described herein will be made only by means of a formal Private Placement Memorandum (PPM), subscription agreement, and related offering documents, to accredited investors as defined under Rule 501 of Regulation D or qualified purchasers under Regulation S. All purchasers must complete KYC/AML verification and accredited investor verification before participation. DIGag tokens are restricted securities subject to transfer restrictions under applicable law. This content is for informational purposes only and is subject to change without notice. All legal, tax, and compliance matters are subject to review by qualified securities counsel. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Forward-looking statements are subject to material risks and uncertainties.