Genesis Reserve Lanes and Capital Classes
Genesis Protect Acute uses explicit reserve lanes and capital classes so members, sponsors, and LPs can see what is actually supporting claims.
Use this page when you need to separate claims-paying reserve from membership revenue, future demand, or generic capital narratives.
Genesis Protect issuance should be described against posted reserve lanes and staffed Phase 0 review readiness, not broad solvency language or future inflow assumptions.
What counts as claims-paying reserve
- Collected protection premiums
- Explicit sponsor or backstop funds
- Posted LP-backed capital
What does not count as claims-paying reserve
- OmegaX Health app membership fees
- Unposted future demand
- Narrative momentum around issuance
- Any other capital that has not been explicitly posted into the protection lanes
The current Genesis reserve lanes
Travel 30
| Lane | Role |
|---|---|
genesis-travel30-premiums | Collected premiums attributed to the Travel 30 protection reserve lane |
genesis-travel30-liquidity | Posted LP and backstop capital that supports Travel 30 obligations |
Travel 30 does not have a separate sponsor lane in the current launch shell.
Event 7
| Lane | Role |
|---|---|
genesis-event7-premiums | Collected premiums attributed to the Event 7 reserve lane |
genesis-event7-sponsor | Explicit sponsor subsidy or backstop capital for approved cohort issuance |
genesis-event7-liquidity | Posted LP and backstop capital that supports Event 7 obligations |
Capital classes in the current launch shell
Genesis Protect Acute uses two public capital sleeves:
Genesis Acute Senior Classfor senior open capitalGenesis Acute First-Loss Classfor junior first-loss capital
The point is to keep impairment order and redemption behavior legible rather than hiding everything behind one pooled reserve story.
| Class | Role | Reader caution |
|---|---|---|
Genesis Acute Senior Class | Senior open capital that can support obligations under the configured reserve rules. | Senior does not mean risk-free. |
Genesis Acute First-Loss Class | Junior capital intended to absorb impairment first. | First-loss exposure should not be described like senior exposure. |
Impairment order
Junior first-loss capital is meant to absorb impairment before senior open capital is expected to carry the same loss path.
That does not mean senior capital is risk-free. It does mean the classes are not interchangeable, and public wording should not flatten them into one pooled exposure story.
What this means for each audience
Members
Claim-paying support should come from explicit posted reserve, not vague pooled solvency promises.
Sponsors
Sponsor-backed issuance should remain attributable. Event 7 sponsor support is a visible lane, not an invisible subsidy hiding inside a generic vault story.
LPs
LP exposure should stay class-aware. Junior first-loss and senior open capital are not the same risk, and they should not be described as though they are.
Queue-only redemption and stress posture
Genesis Protect Acute does not promise instant free exit when liabilities remain outstanding.
If reserve posture degrades or liabilities stay outstanding:
- redemptions can move to queue-only behavior
- impairment should remain explicit
- claims-paying capital should stay visible before broader capital freedom is implied
Why the wording stays strict
The public promise is not that Genesis Protect has infinite pooled solvency.
The public promise is that reserve attribution stays explicit enough for members, sponsors, and LPs to understand where claim-paying support comes from and why issuance may need to pause.