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---
type: source
title: "Street FDN ERC-S — Economic Exposure Tokens Without Governance"
author: Street FDN
url: https://www.street.fdn
date: 2026-03-09
domain: internet-finance
status: processed
processed_by: rio
processed_date: 2026-03-09
claims_extracted: 0
enrichments: 0
curator_notes: |
Street FDN's ERC-S instrument provides economic exposure to company performance without voting rights or governance participation. Structure: Company → SPV/Foundation → DAO → token holders. The "ERC-S" name suggests Ethereum heritage but the platform operates ON SOLANA (confirmed by Cory).
Key distinction from MetaDAO: ERC-S is explicitly designed to be compatible with traditional VC and M&A exit pathways. This is a bet that the existing capital structure matters — that companies need to be acquirable and VC-fundable while also having token exposure.
Competitive positioning:
- MetaDAO: governance-first, anti-rug through futarchy liquidation
- Street FDN: exit-compatible, no governance, economic exposure only
- Both on Solana. Street FDN optimizes for company flexibility, MetaDAO for investor protection.
The SPV/Foundation/DAO wrapper structure is interesting — it creates legal separation layers that may help with securities classification. But it's also complexity that the DRP (SOAR) model avoids.
extraction_hints: |
- ERC-S technical specification — what exactly is the instrument?
- SPV/Foundation/DAO structure: legal analysis, Howey implications
- M&A compatibility mechanics: what happens to tokens during acquisition?
- Comparison with SOAR DRP: both strip governance, but different legal structures
- How does economic exposure work without equity? Revenue share? Debt? Synthetic?
priority: high
---
# Street FDN ERC-S — Web Research Archive
## Source Context
Web research conducted 2026-03-09 on Street FDN's ERC-S token instrument. Despite the "ERC" naming convention (suggesting Ethereum origins), the platform operates on Solana.
## Key Findings
### ERC-S Structure
- Company → SPV/Foundation → DAO → Token holders
- Economic exposure without voting rights or governance control
- Designed for compatibility with traditional VC funding and M&A exits
- No governance participation for token holders
### Design Philosophy
Street FDN's thesis: tokens should provide economic upside without creating governance complications that scare away traditional capital. Companies using ERC-S can still:
- Raise from traditional VCs
- Be acquired (M&A compatible)
- Maintain conventional corporate governance
- Offer token holders economic participation
### Legal Architecture
The multi-layer wrapping (Company → SPV → Foundation → DAO → tokens) creates legal separation between the operating entity and token holders. This may:
- Help with Howey test (no "common enterprise" with operating company)
- Create regulatory defensibility through structural separation
- Add complexity that increases legal costs
### Competitive Position
| Dimension | MetaDAO | Street FDN |
|-----------|---------|------------|
| Governance | Full futarchy | None |
| Investor protection | Market-governed liquidation | Legal structure |
| VC compatibility | Low (futarchy is foreign) | High (designed for it) |
| M&A compatibility | Unclear | Designed for it |
| Chain | Solana | Solana |
## Gaps
- ERC-S technical specification not found in initial search
- Specific companies using ERC-S not identified
- Token economics (fees, supply mechanics) unknown
- Need deeper web and Twitter research for team, traction, and community data