Co-Investment
Co-investment refers to the practice of multiple participants pooling capital into a single opportunity — typically alongside a lead investor or fund. It’s a structure designed to distribute risk, increase exposure to high-potential projects, and create shared alignment across stakeholders.
Traditionally, co-investment has been a tool reserved for institutional players, venture capital firms, and accredited angel networks. In these cases, participants contribute jointly to support a specific opportunity — whether it’s a startup, fund, or structured vehicle — and share in both its risks and potential upside.
🧱 The Benefits of Co-Investment Models
Risk-sharing: Capital is distributed among multiple participants, lowering exposure for each
Access to curated deals: Smaller participants can follow institutional or expert leads
Alignment: All parties are directly incentivized to support the success of the opportunity
Network effect: Co-investment often fosters deeper collaboration and signal strength
However, despite these advantages, co-investment opportunities have remained largely closed to retail participants due to structural, legal, and financial barriers.
🔓 Jolders: Opening Up Co-Investment for Everyone
Jolders extends the co-investment model beyond institutional circles by building a decentralized infrastructure for structured, tokenized participation.
Through our platform:
Participants can join curated opportunities at low minimums
Ownership is represented via digital tokens (NFTs) that can carry embedded rights
Projects can be startups, funds, or other private vehicles
Governance and reporting are fully digital and transparent
Secondary access may be available, offering additional flexibility
This structure makes collaborative capital deployment possible at a global scale — and with greater autonomy and transparency than ever before.
🔍 Further Reading
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