Investing


Smart Contract Investments

These smart contract products range from the simple to the complex. Long term to short term. The beginner to the expert level. Here’s a quick overview before you dive into smart contract investing.

Tokenized Stocks

Tokenized Stocks are purchased in “shares.” Each tokenized share is a small piece of the company, which makes you a part-owner. Share prices are constantly going up and down, so stocks can be traded throughout the day.

Tokenized Bonds

Tokenized bonds are cryptographic loans you provide to an institution, such as the Community Treasury, a corporation, or a state or local government. They are designed to pay you interest and return your initial investment 100% by their date of maturity. Risk levels, and therefore rates of return, vary by institution.

Tokenized ETF‘s

Tokenized ETFs—or exchange-traded funds Tokens—are diversified “baskets” of smart contract investments that you can buy for one set price. Tokenized ETF prices go up and down all day, so ETFs can be traded similar to stocks.

Tokenized Certificates

Tokenized Certificates give you the right to buy or sell a Tokenized stock at a set price, on or before an expiration date. The two most common are “puts” where the owner believes the stock’s price will fall, and “calls” where the owner believes the stock’s price will rise.

Tokenized Mutual Shares

Tokenized Mutual funds are “baskets” of tokenized stocks and tokenized bonds that can be purchased for one set price, known as the net asset value. Unlike Tokenized ETFs, whose prices go up and down throughout the day, mutual fund prices only change once, at the close of the trading day.

— by EtherTrade

— Shelton Estate & Co.

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