Hamilton Lane’s SCOPE fund is on-chain by way of KAIO and the Sei Community, enabling entry to personal credit score for certified traders worldwide.
Abstract
- Hamilton Lane launched its flagship Senior Credit score Alternatives Fund on the Sei Community
- RWA platform KAIO is the infrastructure supplier for the tokenized fund
One of many world’s largest personal markets funding managers is formally on-chain. On Wednesday, October 15, Hamilton Lane launched a tokenized model of its flagship Senior Credit score Alternatives Fund (SCOPE) on the Sei Community by KAIO’s on-chain infrastructure.
“This launch marks one other main milestone in institutional blockchain adoption,” stated Mr. Olivier Dang, COO of KAIO. “Through the use of the Sei Community, we’re bringing composable entry to main fund methods fully onchain. It’s the inspiration for real-time, programmable, monetary infrastructure constructed for the subsequent period of investing.”
The fund is out there to traders by the KAIO platform, which can be chargeable for KYC checks. Investments can be found to institutional and accredited traders, in compliance with U.S. monetary rules.
Hamilton Lane’s integration with SEI broadens entry to personal credit score
The mixing makes personal credit score funding accessible to a broader vary of accredited and institutional traders. In keeping with the asset supervisor, it additionally facilitates safe and compliant entry to various funding merchandise.
“Hamilton Lane has been an early mover in embracing the expertise that permits a broader group of traders entry to personal markets investments. KAIO’s integration with the Sei (SEI) Community supplies entry to digitally native finish traders which might be more and more seeking to diversify their portfolio into personal belongings,” stated Victor Jung, Head of Digital Property at Hamilton Lane.
Hamilton Lane has been concerned in personal markets for over 30 years and has roughly $986 billion in belongings beneath administration. On the similar time, KAIO already holds $200 million in RWAs from main establishments, together with BlackRock, Brevan Howard, and Laser Digital.
