If you are building a yield product in 2026, your hardest job is not technology, it is trust. ShareFund is built so the platform itself answers the question every investor will ask: "is this real, or is it just the next HYIP?"
HYIP, short for "high yield investment program", is the category name for apps and websites that promise returns far above market, with no real underlying activity to fund them. The model is almost always the same: new deposits pay old withdrawals (the textbook definition of a Ponzi structure), the dashboard shows numbers go up, and the whole thing works until inflows slow. Then it stops, fast.
The numbers feel close to ShareFund's pool yields. That is exactly the perception problem, and exactly why this page exists. We are not coy about the difference. We are the difference.
An HYIP pays you out of the next person's deposit. ShareFund pays you out of a real, settled transaction that your operator actually executed in the real world.
On ShareFund, an investor's profit can only be credited after an admin enters a real sale, a real service delivery, or a real asset settlement. The platform does not let an operator "declare" yield in the abstract. Every payout has a source row.
Every credit and debit is permanent. Corrections are new rows. There is no admin button anywhere that says "edit wallet balance". Investors can audit their own ledger end to end. Your auditor can do the same.
Investor capital sits in a custodial USDT wallet, split 10% hot for daily flow and 90% cold in multi-sig. The cold storage requires two independent signers to move funds. You hold one key, ShareFund holds the other. Neither side can move money alone.
Total assets must exceed or equal total liabilities. Each member's bucket must equal their ledger. Each campaign's ownership must sum to its supply. Each settlement's payouts must match reported profit. Pending withdrawals must match the Reserved bucket. If any invariant fails, the platform alerts ops and can auto-pause new deposits and withdrawals.
An operator running a ShareFund tenant cannot reach into the platform's code, cannot bypass invariants, cannot touch another operator's data, cannot edit the ledger. The platform is the referee, not a partner in the offer. This matters more than any marketing copy.
You inherit credibility you would otherwise have to spend years building. When an investor asks "how do I know this is not just another yield trap", you can show them:
That is a conversation you cannot have on an HYIP-style stack. That is the entire reason ShareFund exists.
These are not features. They are the platform's terms of service for operators.
If you are serious about running a real yield product, you are exactly the operator we want to talk to.