Capital Instruments & Liquidity
Outside capital needs more than a funded wallet balance. It needs an instrument it can understand.
What capital should hold
The cleanest long-range capital object is a capital class.
That object should make it clear:
- what plan or exposure it belongs to
- what assets and liabilities matter to it
- what priority rules apply
- when redemptions are allowed
- whether it is open, restricted, or wrapper-mediated
What makes a capital instrument credible
Serious capital will ask:
- what exactly backs this position
- what liabilities are already ahead of it
- how reserve shortfall is handled
- when liquidity can exit
- whether redemptions are limited to genuinely free capital
If the protocol cannot answer those questions clearly, the instrument is not ready for broad market distribution.
Reserve-aware liquidity
OmegaX is moving toward a reserve-aware liquidity model.
That means redemptions should reflect:
- assets
- minus reserved liabilities
- minus pending withdrawals or queue obligations
- minus restricted balances where applicable
This is how OmegaX avoids confusing gross balances with actually free capital.
Why policy rights and capital rights stay separate
Member policy rights are about benefits, claims, and participation.
Capital rights are about:
- exposure
- redemption
- priority
- impairment
- distributions
Keeping those objects separate is what makes both sides clearer.
Market-readiness consequence
Broad outside liquidity should come after:
- reserve accounting matures
- capital objects become legible
- reference valuation surfaces exist
- reporting becomes comparable
That order is slower than token-first marketing, but it is the order that creates durable trust.