Frequently Asked Questions

How to open an Account

How to Invest

1. How do I open an account on the Tokenized Energy platform?

Click on either the Investor Portal button at the top right corner of our home page or on the Sign Up Now button on the home page. If you don’t already have an account, click on sign-up and complete the required forms and information requests on the investor sign-up pages, up through the KYC portion of the account sign-up process. We will then review your application and if you are approved as an investor, you will receive an email informing you that you have been approved, then you must return to your account to complete the investor profile questionnaires and connect a digital wallet to the Tokenized Energy platform (this is required since we need to know where to send your tokens and your distributions).
For an overview of the account opening process, see the following video

You must be approved by the Tokenized Energy platform as an investor, then complete your account opening process. Depending on the requirements of a particular investment offering, you may or may not be required to be an accredited investor and may or may not be required to be a U.S. citizen (our current intention is to make all of our offering available to non-U.S. citizens pursuant to Regulation S), but assuming that you satisfy those requirements, you are ready to invest. Watch this quick video to learn how to get started with your first investment

No. Tokenized Energy offers a more modern, efficient, cost-advantageous way to invest in upstream oil and gas assets than traditional finance investment processes and requires that you invest via digital tokens issued to you on the Base blockchain. Click here to see how to get started with your first investment.

When you reach the portion of your account set-up process which requires connecting a digital wallet to your account, you will see descriptions of a couple of the many options for creating a digital wallet, namely two of the most popular wallets, MetaMask wallet and Coinbase wallet. We would recommend that you use Coinbase wallet, primarily because our digital security tokens which represent your security interest (if you choose to invest) and the USDC tokens which we will use for distributions will be issued on the Base blockchain, which was developed by Coinbase. You are not required to use a Coinbase or MetaMask wallet, however – the choice of wallet is up to you, as long as your wallet is Ethereum or EVM-compatible. There are many readily available resources for creating a digital wallet and determing whether it is Ethereum/EVM-compatible – for one of them, click on the following link: https://help.coinbase.com/en/wallet/getting-started/create-a-coinbase-wallet.
Click here to see how to get started with your first investment.

Yes. The reason that we require you to connect a digital wallet to your Tokenized Energy account before enabling you to invest is that we need to know where to send you the digital tokens which represent your investment and any future distributions which come from the underlying assets in which you have invested. Our platform automates the issuance of those digital tokens and the making of those distributions (subject to any reserves deemed necessary by the asset manager) and we therefore need to know in advance where to send them.
Our digital tokens are issued on the Base blockchain, which is a Layer 2 blockchain of the Ethereum blockchain and therefore you will need to connect a wallet which is compatible with and is capable of receiving tokens on the Ethereum blockchain/network and the Base blockchain/network (commonly referred to as an EVM-compatible wallet (where EVM stands for Ethereum virtual machine). If you need help in creating a wallet, please see the resources linked on the Wallet page of your Tokenized Energy account.

No. Tokenized Energy does not “custody” or control your wallet. You retain ownership and exclusive control of your wallet. We require that you “connect” (or associate) a digital wallet that is capable of receiving tokens on the Base/Ethereum networks (an “EVM-compatible” wallet as described elsewhere) just because we must know where to send your digital tokens which represent your investment and any future distributions. When you connect your wallet with your Tokenized Energy account, it is similar to just providing us with an address so we’ll know where to send tokens, but it does not provide us with the “keys” (or access) to that address.
Your wallet address is public (but not your personal identifying information for that wallet address) and anyone who is capable of using and interpreting Basescan (a software program designed to track transactions on the Base blockchain) can see the tokens and the token balances which are held in your digital wallet (hence the transparency of the blockchain), but they cannot control the transfers into or out of that wallet.
The methods of creating and protecting digital wallets from unauthorized access are constantly evolving, but you should take security precautions when you create any digital wallet so that you do not grant access to your wallet to any third party – when you set up your digital wallet, you may receive for example a 12 to 24 word seed or recovery phrase which is unique to your wallet, you may use a QR code to create a form of two-factor authentification for wallet access or set up a passkey like a Yubikey to restrict access to your wallet.
All of these things work as the “keys” to your digital wallet – you should store them in a safe place offline and NEVER share them with anyone. Tokenized Energy does not need, and will NEVER ask for, any of these items from you – if anyone ever asks you for them, do NOT provide them, since it will give them access to and control of your wallet.

Yes you can. After you have been issued a digital token in an LLC or LP in which you have elected to invest, you can go into your investor account and print out a piece of paper referencing your investment. This piece of paper is not a legal instrument (or legal evidence of your equity ownership interest in the LLC or LP in which you have invested) and itself can not be transferred or assigned, we are merely making it available to you for informational purposes if you want to have it to aid your or your advisor’s record-keeping for your investment.

Please follow the process described at this link, and also see the video which you can access by clicking this link. Once you have completed your account sign-up process and Tokenized Energy has approved you as an investor on our platform, you should go to the Investment Opportunities page and after due diligencing the opportunity,
if you decide to invest, then go to the Invest segment of the page describing the particular investment opportunity, fill in the empty box with the number of tokens to which you would like to subscribe, then click on the Invest button, then review and sign the necessary investor documents (typically a Subscription Agreement, which also authorizes us to sign the investment entity’s governance document on your behalf (typically either a Limited Liability Company Agreement or a Limited Partnership Agreement, depending on the form of the entity which holds the underlying oil and gas assets),
then finally fund your investment by either wire transfer, ACH from your bank account or by sending USDC directly from one of your mobile wallets. After the necessary number of subscriptions are received and approved by the manager of the asset in which you intend to invest, the offering will then be closed and your tokens representing your investment will be issued to you and sent directly to the mobile wallet which you have associated with your Tokenized Energy account.

The most likely explanation - you have to fill in the number of tokens that you’d like to purchase in the empty box first, then the Invest button will appear.

You will likely see a variety of different investment opportunities that involve several different asset classes, each of which fall at a different place on the risk-reward spectrum. We are likely to offer investments ranging from non-operated working interests to royalty interests to leasehold interests, which in any particular case, may represent interests in new well participations, wells that have already been drilled and are producing (commonly referred to as PDPs), mineral interests (either developed or un-developed or a combination of both) and/or interests in undeveloped leases – please refer to each individual investment opportunity to determine the relevant asset class and asset characteristics, since they will vary.
The assets underlying those interests could be located in one or more of the United States oil basins. The risk profiles of these assets will vary widely and you should undertake to perform your own due diligence and investment decision-making with due care.

There two types of working interests – operated and non-operated. Working interests are analogous to partnership interests and they bear the capital burden associated with drilling of wells and their subsequent operation, maintenance and eventual plugging and abandonment. The operator who is directly responsible for overseeing the drilling of wells and subsequently the daily management of a well’s operations holds an operated working interest (although note that sometimes the named operator might outsource some or all of the operational burden to other parties). All other working interest holders in wells hold non-operated working interests.

An operator is responsible for the drilling and/or daily operations of an oil and gas well. Tokenized Energy does not currently contemplate that it or its asset manager (an affiliated entity) will serve as an operator, instead opting to hold and manage non-operated working interests (or other non-operated asset classes).
Although Tokenized Energy and its asset manager may hold and offer leases from time to time that would entitle it to be the operator of those lease(s), it would not contemplate ultimately serving as the operator of those leases. The statements above are generalizations based on what is currently contemplated, but for a definitive answer on whether an asset that is the subject of a particular investment opportunity is operated or non-operated, you should consult the Offering Memorandum (if applicable) or other documents or asset descriptions posted in the data room for that opportunity.

A mineral interest is an ownership interest in the subsurface which contains the reservoirs which produce oil & gas. Think of it as subsurface real estate. You can either acquire a mineral interest or enter into an oil and gas lease with the owner of the mineral interest which gives the owner of the lease the right to drill for and produce oil and gas from the minerals owned by the mineral owner, subject to the terms of that oil and gas lease.
In the typical situation, the owner of the minerals receives and bonus payment (either paid typically up front or in some cases, in installments over time) and a royalty payment entitling the mineral owner to receive a stipulated percentage of the value of the oil and gas produced (again, subject to the specific terms of the relevant oil and gas lease).
If the owner of mineral interests enters into an oil and gas lease, the mineral owner will not typically bear any capital burden with respect to the drilling for and producing oil and gas from the minerals. If the mineral owner elects to participate in any wells (as opposed to entering an oil and gas lease) drilled on the minerals, then the mineral owner will bear a capital burden to the extent of the mineral owner’s participation.
Also note that mineral ownership can be severed from the ownership of the surface real estate. We sometimes refer to the mineral owner as a landowner, but the key fact to determine in our case is the ownership of the mineral estate (except to the extent you may be concerned about the required surface drilling location).

Royalty interests are rights to receive a stipulated percentage of the value of oil and gas produced from the acreage to which the royalty interests relate. Royalty interests do not bear any capital burden with respect to the cost of drilling for or producing oil and gas from the relevant acreage. Royalty interests are typically created in a couple of different ways:
(1) when a landowner enters into an oil and gas lease (the landowner/mineral owner is referred to as the “lessor” in that context) with a lessee, the landowner/mineral owner receives an agreed upon percentage of the value of oil and gas which is eventually produced from the landowner’s acreage – this percentage is a royalty interest;
(2) the lessee may subsequently transfer some or all of the lessee’s interest in an oil and gas lease and in connection with that transfer, will reserve what is called an overriding royalty interest (ORRI) on the transferred the lease – this ORRI is a royalty interest; and
(3) sometimes a party involved in brokering a transaction involving an oil and gas lease may be awarded compensation in the form of an ORRI, which as explained above is a royalty interest. Royalty interests can typically be freely transferred and can therefore end up in the hands of investors who were not parties to the original transaction which created the royalty interest.

There could be a couple of explanations. First, you must have completed the entirety of your investor registration process and have been confirmed as a permissioned investor on our platform. Second, if you have completed your registration and been approved by us as an investor on our platform, then your execution of a Confidentiality Agreement is required in some cases in order for you to access the data room. If neither of these fixes your access issue, please contact us.

You can find information on Investment Opportunities on the page which is named as such. In the search bar at the top, you can search by Basins/Shales, Asset Type and Production Method.
When you click on what you are searching for, the site will take you to the Investment Opportunities page, where you should click on the button entitled “Review Opportunity”, which will take you to page summarizing that opportunity.
At the bottom of that page, you will see the heading “Data Room”. Click on Confidentiality Agreement, if required (it may not be required for all Investment Opportunities), execute the Confidentiality Agreement, then assuming that you have completed the entirety of your investor registration process and been approved as an investor on our platform, you can then access the due diligence information on the selected Investment Opportunity in the Data Room.
You can download each item by clicking on the download icon to the right of each document that you desire to download or click on that same icon next “Download All” in the top right corner of the Data Room.

See the lower left corner of the applicable Investment Opportunity page in the section entitled “For Additional Information” – feel free to contact the individual named in that section by phone, email or through our platform to request the information or ask your questions. Please do NOT use the Contact Us feature on our platform to obtain additional information about specific Investment Opportunities.

Currently, all investment opportunities are originated and reviewed by the Tokenized Energy team and its professional consultants (as and to the extent needed). Eventually, we plan to make the Tokenized Energy platform available for use by other asset managers, in which case those investment opportunities will have been originated and reviewed by them.
The description of the particular investment opportunity in the offering documents will contain a reference to the applicable asset owner and asset manager. While we or they may originate and review an investment opportunity and provide you with a data room and some due diligence materials, this information is provided for information purposes only and NOT as a substitute for your own due diligence.
The making available of these investment opportunities does not constitute financial advice or a recommendation to make an investment – the nature and extent of the due diligence that you think is necessary is entirely up to you, as is the making the investment decision itself.

If the underlying asset held by an entity in which you have invested is a producing asset, you can expect to receive distributions on either a monthly or quarterly basis, subject to the retention of any reserves deemed necessary in the discretion of the applicable asset manager for future operating or capital expenses.
For more information on the timing and terms of any distributions, you should consult the Offering Memorandum (if applicable) and investment documents which relate to the particular investment opportunity about which you are asking this question.

Tokenized Energy’s account set-up process requires that you associate (connect) an Ethereum-compatible digital wallet to your account – you can change the associated wallet from time to time if you so chose, so that future distributions will go to the new wallet (note, however, that all prior distributions will stay in the previously associated wallet, unless you take independent action to transfer them out of that wallet – in other words, associating a new wallet, does not automatically cause a transfer of any digital tokens to the newly associated wallet – remember, we do not control your wallet, so if you want to make that transfer, you’ll have to do it).
The applicable asset manager for your investment(s) will make distributions to that connected wallet. Distributions will be in the form of USDC stable coins, which are backed by US Dollars on a 1:1 basis.

In short, there is a holding period and transfer restrictions, but you may be able to sell or transfer your tokens only in limited circumstances. You should consult the Offering Memorandum (if applicable) and investment documents for the particular investment opportunity in which you are interested, those documents will answer this question for you and the terms of holding requirements or transfer restrictions may vary between investment opportunities.
Transfer restrictions and holding periods are driven primarily by two considerations – primarily, the exemption from registration that an investment offering is relying upon in connection with its issuance of security tokens and secondarily, the terms and conditions required by the applicable asset manager in connection with the particular offering. Under Regulation D issued by the US Securities and Exchange Commission, the exemptions from registration that most of our investment offerings are likely to rely on are pursuant to Rule 506(b) and 506(c), both of which have a required holding period of 12 months (for all non-public issuers of securities like our offerings will likely entail), which starts from the date of purchase.
After the holding period, investors can generally resell under Rule 144, but there are still other conditions related to whether or not the seller is an affiliate of the issuer and certain volume, manner of sale and notice requirements depending on affiliate status. There are limited exceptions to the holding period requirement which permit private resales under Section 4(a)(1 ½) to sophisticated purchasers or exceptions for transfers to a spouse/family member, estate or trust for the benefit of the original holder or by gift or inheritance.
Also note that to provide an exchange facilitating resales requires a separate license that Tokenized Energy does not currently have (regardless of licensure issues, there will not likely be sufficient liquidity in the near term to facilitate an effective token exchange). Notwithstanding the above, Tokenized Energy offerings initially will prohibit resales without the consent of the asset manager for the particular offering.
If you want to sell your tokens, the Tokenized Energy platform has a built-in functionality which allows you to communicate to us your desire to sell and an asking price (or you can choose not to indicate an asking price) – the asset manager will then assess your request in light of applicable law and determine, in its discretion, whether it can facilitate your transfer request.
Given these restrictions, you should only invest in the security tokens issued on our platform if you can hold those tokens without the need to resell them for an indefinite period of time given the lack of liquidity and the lack an active trading market or exchange for them.

All of the notifications, investor updates and other communications from our platform to your account can be found under Notifications by clicking on the bell icon in the top right quadrant of your investor account page.

Yes, our independent accounting firm will prepare the requisite K-1 for your equity interest in the LLC or LP in which you invested and email that to you in time for inclusion in your personal tax filing.

Maybe, but we would need to discuss that with you. We are always open to evaluating new opportunities to list on the Tokenized Energy platform – as it stands right now, we either own or contract for the acquisition of assets which we have or are going to list on the platform (with our asset manager to manage the asset after closing), but given the current status of our platform and our status with respect to various licenses (e.g., at present, we do not have our own broker-dealer license),
there are limiting factors as to what we can do and how a deal can be structured – for example, we can enter into a contract to acquire your asset on mutually acceptable terms if we feel that it is appropriate for our platform and a good deal for our investors and then fund the acquisition using the platform, but neither we nor you can use the platform to raise money for you at this point in time.
We plan is to eventually make the Tokenized Energy platform available for use by other asset managers (although the time frame is currently uncertain), subject to our obtaining the required licenses or partnering with an entity that already has them. With that understanding, we’d be happy to discuss your asset with you – please send us an executive summary and your contact information to pursuant to our Contact Us information elsewhere on our website.

You should consult the Offering Memorandum (if applicable) and other investment documents (including, but not limited to, any disclosures or documents contained in the applicable Data Room) which pertain to the particular investment opportunity in which you are interested about whether the offering is available to you and what special rules may apply.
Although these documents will tell you in particular whether the subject offering is being made to non-U.S. citizens, in general we intend to make our offerings available to non-U.S. citizens pursuant to the exemption from registration available pursuant to Regulation S promulgated by the US Securities and Exchange Commission.
The particular Offering Memorandum (if applicable) and investment or disclosure documents will also tell you whether you must be an accredited investor or not to participate in that particular offering. Also note that, at present, under US securities law, we are required to withhold 30% of any distributions which are attributable to a non-U.S. citizens investment and to remit that amount to the United States Internal Revenue Service. We are not tax advisors and you should consult your own tax advisor, but you can file an income tax return in the United States and claim this withholding amount as a credit against any tax which you may owe to the United States Internal Revenue Service.
We are also exploring the use of feeder funds which may alleviate this withholding requirement, but as of this writing do not yet have that option available to non-U.S. investors.

First, note that neither Tokenized Energy nor its directors, executive officers, principals, managers, special purpose entities formed for the purposes of investment on this platform or any of their respective affiliates are tax experts or advisors and nothing herein should be construed as tax or financial advice – for that, you should consult your own tax or financial advisor. Second, what is provided below is merely a high level overview of the tax benefits of investing in oil & gas projects and should not be considered a comprehensive treatment of this complex subject.

There are currently many tax benefits associated with investing in upstream oil & gas projects.
First, if an investor invests in one of our special purpose entities which holds a non-operated working interest in a well that is in the drilling stage, note that frequently the largest single cost incurred in the drilling of a well are the “intangible drilling costs” or “IDCs”, which are defined roughly to mean costs for items that are necessary for the drilling of a well and its preparation for production and which have no salvage value (implying that they are not considered depreciable property).
The owner of the working interest can make an election to deduct the working interest owner’s share of the IDCs in the year in which the costs which constitute the IDCs are incurred (not when mere prepayments that work like deposits are made) and use those to offset ordinary income or the working interest owner can elect to capitalize and amortize the IDCs over time. Any payments made for equipment or leasehold costs (LHCs) must be capitalized and amortized over time, with depreciation used for equipment and depletion used for LHCs.

Second, a working interest owner’s share of lease and well equipment costs is normally subject to capitalization and depreciation. Assets used in drilling oil and gas wells are generally depreciated using a 5 year recovery period and assets using during the production phase and during operation (gathering pipelines, pumps, and related storage facilities) are depreciated using a 7 year recovery period. Rather than depreciate the property, however, taxpayers can claim bonus depreciation, if eligible, or elect to expense such costs provided that certain conditions are met.

Third, a non-op working interest owner is entitled to a deduction for the greater of cost depletion of allowable percentage depletion. Cost depletion is based on the LHC of the property and is calculated using the mineral reserves and number of units sold for the year (for cash-basis taxpayers, the number of units sold means units for which payment was actually received within the tax year.
Cost depletion is similar to depreciation determined on a units of production method and it stops when the LHC is fully depleted. Percentage depletion on the other hand, is based on a percentage of gross receipts from the property and the rate is generally 15%, with some variance depending on the context and the characteristics and situation of the taxpayer.
A taxpayer’s total percentage depletion deduction cannot exceed 65% of taxable income, computed without deducting percentage depletion and certain other deductions and carrybacks. Percentage depletion continues even after the LHC is depleted because it is based on a percentage of gross income from the property.
You will be investing in a pass-through entity and we intend to pass-through and allocate these tax benefits among the interest holders, including any carried interests, pro rata based on the interests that they hold in the entity in which they invest. Again, this is not tax advice and we are not qualified to provide it, this is merely a summary of some of the applicable tax benefits. Please consult your tax advisor for more information or analysis.

Tokenized Energy will be forming special purpose entities in the form of either limited liability companies or limited partnerships using governance documents for those entities consisting of LLC Operating Agreements or Limited Partnership Agreements, respectively. If an LLC Operating Agreement is used, it will designate a Manager, which will be an affiliate of Tokenized Energy.
If a Limited Partnership Agreement is used, it will designate a General Partner, which will be an affiliate of Tokenized Energy. The roles of the Manager or General Partner will be substantially similar – in both cases, they will be authorized to act on behalf either the LLC or the Limited Partnership, as the case may be, and make all decisions regarding the management of the underlying assets owned by such LLCs or Limited Partnerships and the investments being made into such entities, with certain limited exceptions which require the votes of either the members of the LLC (i.e, the investors) or the limited partners of the Limited Partnership (i.e., the investors) which will be set forth in the relevant governance agreements to the extent required by applicable law in this context.

No

No, There are a variety of different hedge instruments and methodologies which could be considered. If we considered using some of those instruments or methodologies (e.g., swaps or costless collars), the hedge counterparty will sometimes require either a credit facility or a guarantee from a creditworthy party – in the first case, as mentioned elsewhere, we do intend to incur debt or have a credit facility secured by the underlying assets, and in the latter case, it would be inappropriate to expect Tokenized Energy to provide such a guaranty (and might not be acceptable to the hedge counterparty in any event).
There are other indirect hedging methodologies (longing or shorting or obtaining options on various oil and gas proxy instruments – crude oil or natural gas futures, oil and gas-related index funds, etc.). There are varying points of view on hedging, but in any event, we will not be entering into hedges and you should approach your investment through the Tokenized Energy platform from the perspective of doing so to gain exposure to oil and gas commodity prices and their inevitable fluctuations.

Yes, of course! The first thing to understand is that in many (if not most) countries outside the United States, the subsurface mineral rights from which oil & gas is produced are owned by the government. In the United States, while there are government-owned lands and mineral rights, there are vast areas in multiple oil and gas basins throughout the United States where those subsurface mineral rights are owned by private individuals or entities or by public companies, none of which are controlled by the government. Therefore, there are significant opportunities for private citizens or entities to invest in the drilling and production of oil and gas wells that you might not encounter outside the United States.

At a high level, the way it typically works in the United States, the company that will be responsible for drilling, producing and operating the well (the “operator) will first negotiate and enter into oil and gas leases with the private landowners who own the subsurface minerals which the operator wants to drill – the terms of those leases will typically include an upfront lease bonus payment to the landowner (or annual payments over time) plus an agreed upon royalty payment based on a percentage of oil and gas sold from the leased lands, along with other provisions. Other parties can compete for and acquire oil and gas leases without intending to become the operator. The operator, when it acquires the requisite percentage interests in the targeted lands, will the unitize those leases and file for drilling permits. The process for doing so varies between among the states and the requisite percentages that the operator acquires may vary greatly depending on the state and governing regulatory regime in which the lands are located….BUT, the main point for this purpose is that the operator often does not end up owning the entirety of the interests in the acquired leases or the well(s) to be drilled.

The interests in an oil and gas well are called working interests. The operator’s working interests are called simply “operated working interests” and the working interests of all of those who don’t serve as operator are called “non-operated working interests”. Depending on the state where the wells are and the prevailing regulations and industry customs in that area, the operator and the parties who own the non-operated working interests may or may not enter into what is called a Joint Operating Agreement which defines the relationship between them. But in any event, the operator is responsible for drilling, producing and operating the wells, but pays each non-operated working interest holder its share of the production revenue typically on a monthly basis (with a few months delay in some places after first production) and charges the non-operated working interest holders their share of the costs, plus an overhead charge. The non-operated working interest holders typically receive a revenue statement and a joint interest billing (a “JIB”) reflecting these items.

There can be several explanations.

First, it is possible that the offering of the tokens for the investment for which you have subscribed has not yet closed. Tokens are not issued until the asset manager for the particular offering has received enough subscriptions to close the offering – when an offering is closed, the offering will show as “completed” on the Tokenized Energy platform and the tokens are then issued.

Second, if the offering has been closed and the tokens have been issued, there are two places for you to check: (a) first, check your account on the Tokenized Energy platform – go to the “Wallet” page of your account. This Wallet page, since the Tokenized Energy platform required you to associate your digital wallet with your account, shows the tokens which are in your digital wallet. Your tokens should show up here. (b) second, if your tokens show up on the Wallet page of your Tokenized Energy account, then those same tokens are also in your digital wallet, BUT, they may not be visible in your digital wallet – digital wallets sometimes only recognize more widely traded, better known digital assets. Not to worry, however, they are there, you just need to make them visible – you can make the tokens visible in your digital wallet by doing what’s called importing a custom token into your digital wallet – in effect, telling your digital wallet what to look for on the Base blockchain. Depending on the type of digital wallet you are using, the process might vary slightly between wallets, but generally this it what you need to do:

 

1. Importing a Custom Token on Coinbase Wallet

1. Open the Coinbase Wallet app or browser extension.
2. Tap or click on “+ Add Tokens” or go to Assets > Add Token.
3. Select “Custom Token.”
4. Make sure you’re on the correct network (e.g., Ethereum, Polygon).
5. Enter the following information:
   – Token Contract Address
   – Token Symbol (e.g., USDC)
   – Decimals of Precision (e.g., 6 or 18)
6. Tap “Preview” to verify the information.
7. Tap “Add Token.” 

 

 

2. Importing a Custom Token on MetaMask Wallet 

1. Open MetaMask and ensure you’re connected to the correct network.
2. Scroll down to the bottom of the Assets tab and click “Import tokens.”
3. Switch to the “Custom Token” tab.
4. Enter:
   – Token Contract Address
   – Token Symbol
   – Decimals of Precision
5. Click “Add Custom Token,” then click “Import Tokens.”
6. The token will now appear in your wallet.

 

 

3. General Process for Importing a Custom Token in Most Wallets 

1. Open your digital wallet application.
2. Navigate to the section where tokens or assets are displayed.
3. Look for an option to “Add Token” or “Import Token.”
4. Choose the option to add a custom token manually.
5. Enter the required token details:
   – Contract Address
   – Symbol
   – Decimals of Precision
6. Confirm and save the new token to add it to your wallet’s asset list. 

 

 

4. How to Find Token Details for Tokenized Energy tokens:  

To locate the contract address, symbol and decimals of precision for your Tokenized Energy tokens, do the following: [insert to come].

 

If the offering is closed and you can’t import a reference to our tokens into your digital wallet, please call support and we will try to help you and remember, never share your seed/recovery phrase for your digital wallet with us or anyone else, no one should ask for it.

First, as referenced elsewhere and in the governance agreements for all of the special purpose vehicles in which you invest through the Tokenized Energy platform, the tokens you acquire have substantial transfer restrictions which arise both under the relevant governance agreement and as a result of the requirements of US securities laws. 

We do not have a license for, and therefore do not operate, a secondary trading exchange to provide liquidity for our tokens, although we hope to do so in the future. For now, however, you may request the Tokenized Energy platform and/or the relevant asset manager to consider your request for either a sell request or a transfer request for all or a portion of your tokens. If you do so, neither the Tokenized Energy platform nor your asset manager is under any obligation to grant such requests, but may, in their sole discretion, consider your request and, if they determine that a transfer is feasible, acceptable under the relevant governance agreement and can be done in compliance with US securities laws then your request may be granted. 


A sell request is merely a request submitted by you by clicking on the “Sell” button on the Assets tab in your wallet, completing the form (either at an asking price or by requesting the “best possible price”) and submitting it for our consideration – no transaction will occur except on mutually acceptable terms. 


A transfer request entails a more specific request by you, submitted by clicking on the Transfer button, then completing and submitting the form – you’ll note that in the case of a transfer request, you are identifying such specifics as the transferee’s name and digital wallet address, then by virtue of your submission asking us to facilitate the requested transfer. Our standard of evaluation is the same for both sell requests and transfer requests.

Still have a question?

If you cannot find answer to your question in our FAQ, you can always

contact us. We will answer to you shortly!

How Our Process Works

 Tokenized Energy brings tokenized technology to the equity ownership of U.S.-based upstream oil and gas assets.

Investor Registration

Sign up and be verified via our KYC/AML-compliant procedures.

1
Review Investment Opportunities

See our investment opportunities marketplace and identify those you are interested in evaluating.

2
Confidentiality Agreement

Digitally sign a Confidentiality Agreement, if required, to access the data room for a particular investment opportunity.

3
Data Room

download and/or review all items in the relevant data room, including a Private Placement Memorandum.

4
Investment Documents

Digitally sign all required investment documents if you want to invest, e.g., a Subscription Agreement and either an LLC Operating Agreement or a Limited Partnership Agreement.

5
Fund your desired
investment

Use ACH, wire transfers, or USDC stablecoins.

6
Token Issuance

Receive security tokens representing your equity interest transferred by our platform to your digital wallet.

7
Distributions

Earn USDC from revenue-generating assets in which you have invested.

8
Exit Sales

Notify us if you would like to sell your tokens through the platform.

9

How Does Tokenized Energy Works?

Tokenized Energy radically transforms investing in ground floor upstream oil & gas investments through tokenization

Open an account on Tokenized Energy
1
Review our investment opportunities
2
Click Invest, then fund your investment
3
Receive digital security tokens into your digital wallet
4
Enjoy future distributions as USDC stable coins sent to your wallet
5

How it Works? Know More

Tokenized Energy Video

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