There's a section on our homepage that our advisers questioned. It lists, in plain language, the five best reasons not to invest with us: twelve months is not a track record; our attestation is engaged but unfinished; SPLT's legal status rests on counsel's opinion, not an SEC letter; FYN is unsecured; and we are a first-time issuer with concentrated leadership. Most firms bury those facts in appendix footnotes. We put them above the fold.
Here is the reasoning, because it isn't altruism.
First: sophisticated capital finds everything anyway. Family offices and experienced individuals have seen a hundred decks. The question is never whether they discover the limitations — it's whether they discover them from you or despite you. The first builds trust; the second ends the conversation. Volunteering the caveat costs us the unsophisticated check we shouldn't take anyway, and earns us the second meeting with the allocator we actually want.
Second: candor is a filter that runs both directions. When we say a one-year record is too little data to size on, the people who keep reading are exactly the people we built this for — investors who evaluate structure, not stories. The Operator's Note on our homepage qualifies prospects more efficiently than any sales process we could design.
Third: it's how the platform itself works. CHUNKER rejects 99.7% of the markets it evaluates. The entire premise of this company is that the discipline of saying no is worth more than the excitement of saying yes. A firm whose engine works that way and whose marketing works the opposite way would deserve your suspicion.
There's a version of this industry that treats disclosure as friction — a legal tax paid in small gray type. We think that version has it backwards. Disclosure is the product demonstration. Anyone can show you a good year. Showing you the exact ways a good year can mislead you is harder, rarer, and — we'd argue — the most institutional thing a young firm can do.
So: read our risk factors first. Push on the unaudited records. Ask why the note pays fifteen percent, because the honest answer is credit risk. If the limitations disqualify us for your mandate, that's the right answer for you, and we'd rather learn it in week one than month six. And if they don't — if what you're looking for is an uncorrelated sleeve run by people who say the quiet parts out loud — then we should talk.
— BettorToken