The Token
“A piece of a real Australian farm. From five hundred bucks. From your phone.”

Think of it like a community-owned farm. The fund buys real Australian farmland. You buy in too — a small fractional share — and so do thousands of other people. The farm is real. The audit is real. Every March a real person walks the paddock and signs. FEVT isn’t a coin — it’s a receipt for your share of a real audited farm, held through a fund that owns the registered title. As the land heals — biodiversity up, soil carbon up, water held longer — the value of what you own goes up with it. From five hundred dollars. From a phone. (Heads-up: Land Tokens are not being issued in the current raise — what’s offered now is the Founder’s Equity unit.)
A real farm. A real title. A real deed.
Hillview Park, Woodhouselee NSW. 910 hectares. Project ID: FE-2026-HV-001. The title is held by the fund and registered on the New South Wales cadastre. The deed names what you own: a fractional beneficial interest in real audited Australian farmland, held through the fund that owns the registered title.
Not a coin. The fund owns the title; you own your share of the fund. As the land heals — biodiversity up, soil carbon up, water held longer — the value of what you own compounds with it.
The land is real. The title is real. The deed is real. The audit is real. So is the dirt.
Every March. A real person. A signed page.
Each March, Pangolin Associates walks the paddock and signs the audit. Southern Cross University runs the science. The Clean Energy Regulator gates the carbon. The signed page is filed on the Guardian register on Hedera, queryable per unit.
Your share is held alongside many thousands of others. The audit covers all of them. The signature carries a name and a date.
Small on purpose. Real on purpose. Audited on purpose.
Five hundred dollars. From your phone.
You don’t need a broker. You don’t need a fund manager. You need a phone and a credit card.
The smallest unit is a fractional share of titled land. The smallest cheque is A$500. The deed sits behind every share. When the paddock makes carbon, biodiversity, food, water and yield — your share takes its part.
Neurath-style civic icons — a hand-drawn paddock outline with a small gold flag planted in one corner, the flag carrying the figure-8 lockup; cream paper, brown ink.
A share. A title. A deed. A phone.
