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For Investors Glossary Term

Alternative Investment

Definition

An investment outside traditional stocks, bonds, and cash. CRTs represent an alternative investment in the Creator Economy with unique risk characteristics.

Understanding Alternative Investment

An alternative investment is any investment that falls outside the traditional categories of publicly traded stocks, bonds, and cash equivalents. Channel Revenue Tokens (CRTs) represent an alternative investment that gives Investors exposure to the Creator Economy through a share of YouTube Creator revenue.

Alternative investments have historically been associated with asset classes such as real estate, private equity, hedge funds, commodities, and collectibles. CRTs introduce a new form of alternative investment by enabling fractional participation in the revenue streams of YouTube Creators—an economic sector that has grown substantially as digital content consumption has increased.

As an alternative investment, CRTs have characteristics that differ significantly from traditional securities. Their performance is tied to individual Creator channel metrics and YouTube advertising revenue rather than corporate earnings or broader market indices. This means CRT performance may not correlate directly with stock market movements, though broader economic conditions can still affect advertising spending and by extension YouTube revenue.

Investors should understand several key aspects of CRTs as alternative investments. They are speculative, with the potential for total loss. They offer limited liquidity, with a mandatory 12-month holding period and no guarantee of secondary market buyers. The asset class is relatively new, with limited historical data to inform long-term performance expectations.

Alternative investments like CRTs are generally recommended as a complement to a diversified portfolio of traditional investments, not as a replacement. The appropriate allocation to alternative investments depends on an Investor's risk tolerance, financial situation, and investment objectives.

Investors considering CRTs as an alternative investment should conduct thorough due diligence, review all offering documents, and consider consulting with a qualified financial advisor.

Key Points to Remember

  • Alternative Investment is regulated by the SEC under Regulation Crowdfunding
  • All investments carry risk — past performance doesn't guarantee future results
  • Review all offering documents carefully before investing

Related Terms

Asset Class

A category of investments sharing similar characteristics and market behavior. CRTs represent a new asset class: Creator Economy securities.

Channel Revenue Token (CRT)

A security representing contractual rights to receive a share of a YouTube Creator's potential future revenue, offered through GigaStar's SEC-registered platform.

Creator Economy

The Creator Economy is the ecosystem of content Creators who monetize through platforms like YouTube, representing a new alternative investment asset class accessible through GigaStar.

Diversification

Spreading investments across multiple CRT offerings to reduce risk. No single Creator position should represent an outsized portion of an Investor's portfolio.

Due Diligence

The research and analysis an Investor should perform before purchasing CRTs, including reviewing Form C, Creator metrics, and risk factors.

Illiquidity

The condition of not being able to easily sell CRTs. During the mandatory 12-month holding period, CRTs are illiquid. Even after, liquidity on the Secondary Market is not guaranteed.

Portfolio

An Investor's collection of CRT holdings across multiple Creator offerings. Diversification across Creators helps manage risk exposure.

Risk Factors

Risk factors are the specific risks associated with investing in CRTs, including Creator performance risk, platform risk, illiquidity, and the potential for total loss of investment.

Speculative Investment

An investment with high risk and uncertain outcome. CRTs are speculative—Investors may lose their entire investment and should invest accordingly.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are CRTs cryptocurrency?

No. CRTs are traditional securities registered with the SEC under Regulation Crowdfunding. They represent contractual rights to a share of a Creator's YouTube revenue, not a digital currency or blockchain token. Unlike cryptocurrency, CRTs have regulatory oversight from the SEC and FINRA, required disclosure documents (Form C), and Investor protections built into the offering structure.

What happens if a Creator stops making videos?

If a Creator significantly reduces or stops content production, their YouTube revenue would likely decline, which directly reduces or eliminates your distributions. This is one of the key risk factors of CRT investing—your distributions depend on ongoing Creator activity and YouTube revenue generation. While existing videos may continue to earn some revenue, new content is typically the primary driver of channel performance.

What makes CRTs an alternative investment?

CRTs do not correlate directly with stock or bond markets. They represent a new asset class tied to Creator YouTube revenue in the Creator Economy. Like all alternative investments, CRTs are speculative, less liquid than traditional securities, and should represent only a portion of a diversified investment approach. Their performance is driven by individual Creator channel activity rather than broader market conditions.

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