What this is / What this is not
Understanding the Structure.
FundBread provides access to a product-based funding model designed around the production and sale of ultra-luxury goods.
This structure is fundamentally different from traditional investments, loans, or crowdfunding models. Participation is based on funding specific product inventory, with payouts linked directly to real sales performance.
Why this structure exists.
Ultra-luxury products require significant upfront capital to design, manufacture, and position in the market.
Traditional financing methods are often inefficient or misaligned with the nature of these products.
FundBread introduces a structure where funding is directly connected to product creation and real sales outcomes — creating a more transparent and activity-based model.
What this is.
This is a funding model where capital is allocated to the production of specific product inventory.
Each allocation is tied to real, tangible goods that are manufactured and brought to market. The primary source of any payout is the revenue generated from the sale of these products.
Participants do not fund a company in general, but rather contribute to the creation and commercialization of specific inventory.
Payouts are linked to actual sales performance and are distributed according to a predefined structure, with a maximum payout cap defined in advance.
The model is designed to align funding with real economic activity — the production and sale of physical products.
What this is not.
This is not an investment product.
Participation does not provide any form of equity, ownership, or shares in any company or brand.
There are no voting rights, no dividends, and no entitlement to company-level profits.
This is not a loan.
Participants are not contributing to a general campaign, but to specific product-based allocations.
All distributions depend on the successful sale of the underlying products, and outcomes may vary accordingly.
