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Creator Funding Investing Basics

Q1 2026 Distribution Recap: What Investors Received

Wednesday, March 11, 2026 2 min read For investors

Q1 2026 distributions are in the books. As expected, January and February payouts came in below Q4 levels — consistent with the seasonal advertising cycle that drives YouTube revenue.

What Happened

Monthly distributions for January and February reflected the Q1 CPM reset that follows the holiday advertising surge. This is the pattern we see every year: Q4 CPMs peak as holiday ad budgets flood the market, then pull back sharply in January as advertisers reset for the new fiscal year.

Across the GigaStar portfolio, most Creators saw January distributions decline 20–35% from their December highs. February showed early signs of recovery, with CPMs stabilizing as new-year advertising campaigns launched.

Why It Matters

If this was your first full quarter as a CRT holder, these numbers are worth benchmarking. Q1 is typically the lowest-distribution quarter of the year, so the figures you're seeing now represent something closer to a floor than a ceiling.

The more informative comparison will come in Q1 2027, when you can evaluate year-over-year performance. Month-to-month comparisons between Q4 and Q1 tell you more about the advertising market than about any individual Creator's trajectory.

What to Watch Next

Q2 distributions typically recover as spring advertising campaigns ramp up and brands begin spending against their annual budgets. Tax season advertising (financial services, accounting software) provides an additional boost in March and April, particularly for Creators in finance-adjacent niches.

As always, past distribution amounts are not indicative of future results. Revenue depends on Creator performance, YouTube platform dynamics, and advertiser spending patterns — all of which can change.

This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

Key Takeaway

Stay informed about the latest developments in the Creator Economy. Follow our insights for timely updates on the GigaStar platform, regulatory changes, and investment opportunities.

Related 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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