Family Office

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Tokenstub

Tokenstub tokenizes event tickets to fix fragmented secondary markets with on-chain seat-specific assets.

Tokenstub

Tokenstub entered the live-event space with infrastructure aimed at inventory integrity. The platform issues unique digital tokens for each ticket, creating a persistent record of seat provenance that brokers and venues can query before clearing a resale. The architecture sits between primary issuers and secondary aggregators, positioning the firm as a settlement layer rather than a consumer marketplace. Operationally, Tokenstub has not disclosed transaction volumes, headcount, or organized investor backing. Available records point to a lean team iterating on smart-contract logic for venue-specific rule sets — think transfer restrictions, royalty splits, and dynamic pricing hooks that traditional barcodes cannot enforce. Without published deployment figures or named partners, the scope of live integrations remains opaque. The company's known posture is developer-forward, shipping reference implementations that venues can white-label. This contrasts with consumer-facing resale platforms that compete on liquidity aggregation. Tokenstub's value proposition turns on whether rightsholders — sports franchises, festival operators, theater groups — adopt on-chain authentication at the point of primary sale. What distinguishes the architecture is its neutrality. Tokenstub does not run a secondary order book. It verifies authenticity and enforces issuer rules at the protocol level, which theoretically lets any compliant resale channel plug in. Whether that thesis attracts venue-side adoption beyond pilot programs is the central open question.

General information

Firm type

Family Office

Year founded

AUM

Undisclosed

Location

Region

Country

City

Corporate office

Frequently asked questions

How does Tokenstub's model differ from consumer ticket resale platforms?

Tokenstub functions as an authentication and rules-enforcement layer, not a consumer-facing marketplace. It issues unique on-chain tokens for each seat, allowing venues to set transfer restrictions, royalty splits, and dynamic pricing rules. Consumer platforms like StubHub or SeatGeek aggregate buyer and seller liquidity; Tokenstub aims to make the underlying ticket inventory verifiable and programmable regardless of where it is resold.

Who owns Tokenstub and is it venture-backed?

Public records do not name Tokenstub's founders, principals, or investors. The firm has not disclosed venture backing, and no regulatory filings identifying beneficial ownership were located at the time of publication.

Does Tokenstub hold funds or custody assets on behalf of clients?

Based on the firm's described architecture, Tokenstub is not an asset custodian, venue, or broker. It issues the digital representations of tickets and enforces rule logic on-chain. Any custody of sale proceeds or settlement of fiat transactions likely occurs through integrated venue or payment partners.

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