Overview
Libertum is a tokenization platform that turns real-world assets, like property, company shares, and debt, into digital tokens that investors can buy and trade. Asset owners use it to issue these tokens, track who owns them, and pay out earnings, all in one place. It is built for regulated offerings, so identity and compliance checks are part of every step.
Libertum runs a dedicated product line on Cardano and also works on EVM chains such as Base, giving issuers a choice of where to deploy. The platform is white-label, meaning a business can run the whole experience under its own brand and domain. The compliance rules, including identity verification and country restrictions, are written into the tokens themselves1.
Key Features
- Issue tokens for many asset types. Libertum supports eight asset classes, including real estate, private equity, debt, revenue-share agreements, commodities, and invoice factoring, set up through a step-by-step wizard2.
- Compliance built into the token. Identity checks, country rules, and hold-time limits are enforced by the token contract on every transfer, rather than by a back-end system that could be bypassed1.
- A bonding marketplace for liquidity. The B-DEX gives new offerings tradable liquidity from day one, with pricing set by a formula and fees shared back into the system1.
- Run it under your own brand. Issuers can publish a single branded storefront or a full marketplace on their own domain, without writing code1.
- Investor onboarding and reporting. Branded portals handle identity verification and wallet setup, while dashboards track ownership records, payouts, and compliance in one view2.
What to Expect
A visitor exploring Libertum will find three connected tools that share one marketplace and one compliance layer. Asset owners get an issuance workspace for creating and managing tokenized offerings. Investors get a portal where they pass identity checks, browse offerings, and hold or trade tokens. The B-DEX is where those tokens can be traded after issuance3.
The LBM token sits at the center of platform activity. People pay trading and staking fees in LBM, vote on decisions like new asset listings and fee changes, and unlock early access to offerings. A portion of platform revenue is used to buy back and permanently remove LBM from circulation3. On Cardano, Libertum supports CIP-20 native tokens on the mainnet today, with CIP-113 programmable security tokens still in testing1. The platform's contracts were reviewed by the security firm Hashlock, which found several high and medium severity issues that the team resolved before the contracts were rated secure4.
