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SPV Structure Explained: How SPVs Work for Private Investments

SPV Structure Explained: How SPVs Work for Private Investments

SPV Structure Explained: How SPVs Work for Private Investments

Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) have become the standard investment structure for private markets from startup investing and venture capital to real estate, crypto, and alternative assets.
At Allocations, we design institutional-grade SPV structures that simplify investing, protect investors, and keep cap tables clean for founders.

This guide explains what an SPV structure is, how it works, its fee mechanics, and how returns are distributed: in simple, transparent terms.

What Is an SPV Structure?

An SPV structure (Special Purpose Vehicle structure) is a standalone legal entity created for a single, specific investment.

Instead of dozens of investors investing directly into a company or asset, all capital is pooled into one SPV, and the SPV becomes the single investor of record.

At Allocations, each SPV is purpose-built for:

  • one company

  • one asset

  • or one deal

This structure reduces operational friction while maintaining investor protections and regulatory compliance.

How the Allocations SPV Model Works

Every time an investment is launched on Allocations, we create a new SPV entity dedicated exclusively to that opportunity.

Core Components of the Allocations SPV Structure

SPV Fund

The SPV fund is the legal entity created solely to invest in a specific asset or company.

  • Structured as a jurisdiction-appropriate vehicle (LLC, LP, or equivalent)

  • Holds investor capital

  • Owns the underlying securities or asset interests

  • Has a defined lifespan aligned with the investment horizon

Each SPV has a unique name tied to the target investment.

Portfolio Company / Asset

The portfolio company or asset is where the SPV deploys capital.

Examples include:

  • private startups

  • growth-stage companies

  • tokenized real-world assets (RWAs)

  • funds

  • special situations or acquisitions

The SPV holds the investment on behalf of all investors.

Limited Partners (Investors)

Limited Partners (LPs) are the investors in the SPV.

They may include:

  • accredited individuals

  • angel investors

  • family offices

  • syndicates

  • small institutions

LPs are passive investors, they are not involved in daily management and have liability limited to their invested capital.

Units in the SPV

Each investor receives units (or interests) in the SPV proportional to their investment.

  • $1 invested = 1 unit (example)

  • Ownership percentage is based on total units held

  • Returns are distributed according to unit ownership

This creates a clear, auditable ownership structure.

Securities Held by the SPV

In exchange for capital, the SPV receives securities or asset rights, such as:

  • preferred equity

  • common shares

  • SAFEs or convertible notes

  • fund interests

  • tokenized representations of RWAs

The SPV, not the individual investors, is listed on the company’s cap table.

SPV Fee Structure at Allocations

A transparent fee structure is a critical part of any professional SPV structure.

Management & Platform Fees

Depending on the investment type and complexity, SPVs may include:

  • Management or structuring fee
    Covers due diligence, deal execution, compliance setup, and administration.

  • Administrative reserve
    Used for legal, tax filings, accounting, audit support, and regulatory costs.

Fees are disclosed upfront before investors commit capital.

Carry (Performance Fee)

When the investment exits:

  1. Investors first receive their initial capital

  2. Profits are distributed to LPs

  3. A pre-agreed carry percentage is allocated to the SPV lead or manager

Carry aligns incentives — returns are earned only when investors win.

How Returns Work in an SPV Structure

Returns are realized when the underlying investment experiences a liquidity event, such as:

  • acquisition

  • merger

  • IPO

  • asset sale

  • secondary transaction

Distributions flow from:
Company / Asset → SPV → Investors

Allocations handles:

  • capital return calculations

  • profit allocation

  • reporting

  • investor payouts

Monetizing Your SPV Investment

SPV investments are generally long-term, but there are multiple potential liquidity paths.

Primary Exit

Most SPVs generate returns through:

  • M&A events

  • public listings

  • structured asset exits

Typical timelines range from 5–7 years, though outcomes vary by asset class.

Secondary Liquidity (Where Applicable)

Some SPV structures may allow:

  • secondary transfers

  • internal investor exits

  • structured secondary programs

Secondary liquidity is not guaranteed, but SPVs provide flexibility unavailable in direct investing.

Why Investors Use SPV Structures

The SPV structure is preferred because it offers:

  • clean cap tables for companies

  • pooled capital efficiency

  • professional governance

  • limited liability

  • simplified tax and reporting

  • institutional-grade compliance

For founders, SPVs mean one investor instead of dozens.
For investors, SPVs mean clarity, protection, and scale.

Risks You Should Understand

SPV investments involve risk, including:

  • loss of capital

  • illiquidity

  • long holding periods

  • regulatory or market changes

SPVs do not eliminate investment risk — they structure it efficiently.

Investors should review all disclosures and risk documentation before participating.

Why Allocations for SPV Structures

Allocations builds modern SPV infrastructure designed for today’s private markets.

Our platform supports:

  • startup and venture SPVs

  • alternative asset SPVs

  • tokenized asset SPVs

  • global investor participation

  • end-to-end compliance and reporting

From formation to exit, Allocations manages the entire SPV lifecycle.

We’re Here to Help

If you have questions about SPV structures or launching an SPV with Allocations, our team is available to help.

📩 Contact: sales@allocations.com

Your next deal shouldn't wait.

Your next deal shouldn't wait.

Allocations gets you from idea to funded SPV in days — not weeks.

SOCIAL MEDIA

Allocations secondary market is operated through Allocations Securities, LLC dba AllocationsX, member FINRA/SIPC. To check this firm on BrokerCheck, click on the following link: here. The main FINRA website can be accessed through this link: here. Allocations Securities, LLC is a wholly owned subsidiary of Allocations, Inc.

Copyright © Allocations Inc

SOCIAL MEDIA

Allocations secondary market is operated through Allocations Securities, LLC dba AllocationsX, member FINRA/SIPC. To check this firm on BrokerCheck, click on the following link: here. The main FINRA website can be accessed through this link: here. Allocations Securities, LLC is a wholly owned subsidiary of Allocations, Inc.

Copyright © Allocations Inc

SOCIAL MEDIA

Allocations secondary market is operated through Allocations Securities, LLC dba AllocationsX, member FINRA/SIPC. To check this firm on BrokerCheck, click on the following link: here. The main FINRA website can be accessed through this link: here. Allocations Securities, LLC is a wholly owned subsidiary of Allocations, Inc.

Copyright © Allocations Inc