An Ounce of Prevention
Oil and gas investing has traditionally been reserved for industry insiders, large institutions, and investors capable of writing substantial checks. In this episode of An Ounce of Prevention, host Rachel Reese sits down with Chip Simmons and Adrian Macias of Tokenized Energy to discuss how their platform is using blockchain technology to make direct participation in oil and gas assets more accessible to individual investors. Chip and Adrian explain how Tokenized Energy acquires and conducts due diligence for the oil and gas assets, places them into dedicated investment vehicles, and then allows accredited investors to purchase fractional interests through a digital platform. Rather than investing in a traditional fund where a manager makes all allocation decisions, investors can evaluate individual deals, choose specific operators, basins, and asset types, and build their own portfolios based on their investment thesis. The discussion explores how tokenization works, what investors actually own when they receive a digital token, and why the founders believe blockchain technology can reduce administrative friction while increasing access to high-quality energy investments. The conversation also addresses common misconceptions about blockchain and cryptocurrency. Chip and Adrian explain the difference between speculative crypto assets and tokenized real-world assets, emphasizing that the platform’s offerings represent actual ownership interests in underlying oil and gas investments. They also discuss industry trends, institutional adoption of tokenization, stablecoins, and why they believe digital ownership structures will become increasingly commonplace across financial markets in the years ahead. Before the discussion, Rachel provides a case law update on Clifton v. Johnson, a Texas Supreme Court decision addressing the interpretation of royalty deeds containing double fractions. The court held that the deed conveyed a fixed 1/128 royalty interest rather than a floating 1/16 royalty interest, clarifying how courts should analyze double fractions following the Texas Supreme Court’s earlier decision in Van Dyke v. Navigator Group. The ruling highlights the importance of precise drafting in mineral and royalty conveyances and provides additional guidance for resolving disputes involving historic royalty language. If you’re interested in energy investing, blockchain applications, tokenized assets, or the future of private market access, this episode offers an inside look at how technology is changing the way investors participate in oil and gas opportunities. Time Stamps / Chapters 00:00 — Teaser 01:09 — Clifton v. Johnson: double fractions, royalty deeds, and the Texas Supreme Court 04:56 — What the Clifton ruling means for mineral and royalty owners 05:17 — Introducing Tokenized Energy, how Chip and Adrian met 07:58 — How the platform works and lowering barriers to entry for investors 11:08 — Digital tokens, distributions, and ownership through blockchain technology 12:48 — Data rooms, apps, and evaluating investment opportunities 15:09 — Investing at the asset level versus investing through traditional funds 17:38 — Why asset quality and operator selection matter 19:37 — Fees, economics, and investor alignment 20:39 — Institutional adoption and the future of tokenization 22:13 — What a token actually is—and what it is not 27:14 — Real-world assets, stablecoins, and the evolution of blockchain investing 31:05 — Final thoughts on access, technology, and the future of energy investing
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