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MAIV, Brickken Link Up on Tokenized Capital Stack for Amihan

MAIV and Brickken said they have partnered to combine tokenization infrastructure, capital formation and payments into a single operating stack for real-world assets. The companies named Amihan, a land-backed island resort project, as the first planned implementation.

Photo by Lisa Yount on Unsplash

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MAIV and Brickken said in a March 12 company release that they have formed a partnership to deliver what they call an integrated “Tokenized Capital Stack” for real-world-asset funding, combining Brickken’s tokenization infrastructure with MAIV’s capital-formation and deployment functions. The same announcement identified Amihan as the first named implementation, describing it as a 64-hectare private island resort backed by land assets valued at more than $200 million and saying MAIV plans to list the opportunity on its platform.

The transaction sits across at least two European operating bases. MAIV’s own legal page identifies the company as MAIV UG, registered in Berlin, while Brickken’s legal notice identifies Brickken Solutions, S.L. in Barcelona. The release says the partnership takes effect immediately and that implementation is already under way, with a planned integration of MAIV’s FLOW payments infrastructure for investor onboarding and distributions.

What makes the development more than a routine partnership statement is the attempt to combine several functions that are often handled separately in tokenized-asset deals: issuance infrastructure, capital access, and payment/distribution rails. Brickken has previously been selected for the European Blockchain Sandbox, according to the European Commission’s digital-policy site, while MAIV has said its infrastructure is being built to align with MiCA, the EU’s crypto-assets regulation set out in Regulation (EU) 2023/1114. Amihan’s own materials describe a structure in which $LAND reflects the treasury’s NAV, with separate governance and credit tokens alongside it.

For issuers and platforms, the announced change is operational rather than regulatory: Brickken is presented as the tokenization layer, MAIV as the capital-access layer, and FLOW as the planned payments component. For investors, the immediate effect appears limited to the prospect of a future MAIV platform listing rather than a live public offer; the release does not provide a public offering memorandum, token terms, custody details, or launch date, and MAIV’s site says it does not target or accept users from the United Kingdom or United States.

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